RWA Human Services

BACKGROUND

In 2004, the Redfern-Waterloo Partnership
Project (RWPP) commissioned a Review of
Human Services within the Redfern and Waterloo
areas. The main findings of the review where
that:

  • the human services system needs to
    be reformed and reshaped at the local
    level to achieve improved outcomes for
    the community and clients
  • changes must be made to build a more
    integrated service system and more collaborative
    approaches to service provision
  • significant improvements are required
    in relationships between services.

One of the recommendations of the review
was that the RWPP facilitate the development
of a human services plan and, subsequently,
the human services advisory committee has
been established with representatives from
government, non-government, community and
service users.

To commence the planning process, two community
workshops were held in April 2004. The aims
of the workshops were to:

  • identify human service outcomes for
    Redfern-Waterloo
  • develop draft quality of life indicators,
    which will form the basis for ongoing
    evaluation of the human services plan.

A parallel process of community consultation
was also undertaken with service providers
and community representatives in April and
May of 2005. Formed into cluster groups
corresponding with the four priority areas
for 2005/06 young people; families and children;
Aboriginal people andHealth, a series of
workshops were held to identify gaps in
services, duplication of services and areas
where service improvement was needed and
poor communication.

Directions that emerged from the consultation
process are aimed at securing community-wide
benefits. They are identified as:

  • greater community involvement in planning
    and decision-making about local services
  • increased accountability and reporting
    to the community from all human services,
    government and non-government
  • equity of access to services
  • improved coordination among the local
    services
  • politicians and senior managers with
    responsibility for services experiencing
    local issues by coming to Redfern-Waterloo
  • community meetings to be widely promoted
    (through letter drops and word-of-mouth)
    and held in accessible venues (such as
    schools).

In summary the following are the key themes
that emerged from the consultations and
provided the basis for a detailed consideration
of ‘quality of life indicators’ that could
be used to track progress toward the community
results outlined above.

  • Healthy, well educated children and
    young people who have a positive outlook.
    More specifically, the participants wanted
    children and young people who:

    • are respected (‘allowed to be children’)
    • are healthy and active (‘drug-clean’,
      involved in sports, participating
      in associations, clubs and community
      activities)
    • have a positive, confident outlook
      on life (trusting, happy, ‘open
      to the opportunities available to
      them’, prepared to work, respectful
      of their parents, ‘set their
      own goals’)
    • are well educated and have the skills
      to gain employment (’job ready’,
      computer literate)
  • Safe families that are supportive, self-sustaining
    and participating actively in the community.
    More specifically, the participants wanted
    families that are:

    • safe and happy ð diverse (age,
      background, race, culture, socio-economic
      status, language)
    • supportive and stable (ie have access
      to extended families, networks and
      neighbours)
    • inclusive and open to others
    • community-minded
    • self-sustaining rather than welfare-dependent.
  • A safe Redfern-Waterloo community that
    is positive and welcoming. More specifically,
    the participants wanted a community that:

    • is safe and welcoming (‘less fearful’)
    • provides a sense of community (‘easier
      to be good’, ‘stable and united’,
      self-sustaining)
    • is drug and crime-free
    • provides opportunities for people
      to move around and interact
    • has a positive image (‘not of interest
      to the media!’)
    • is accepting of diversity (‘not
      just tolerant of diversity’)

Human Services Ministerial
Advisory Committee

In 2004 an Interim Human
Services Committee was established with
community members, representatives from
the three tiers of government and from the
non-government sector. Following the formation
of the Redfern-Waterloo Authority on 17
January 2005, Minister Frank Sartor announced
that he was establishing three Ministerial
Advisory Committees. The Human Services
Ministerial Advisory Committee will consider
human services and health issues affecting
Redfern and Waterloo.

Membership

 
Mr John
Becker
Area Manager,
Inner City, Department of Housing
Ms Helen Campbell   Solicitor, Redfern
Legal Centre
M/s Anne-Maree Sabellico   Regional Director,
DOCS
M/s Gay Horsburgh   CSAHS
Mr Paul Cramer   Manager, Department
of Family & Community Services
Ms Monica Barone   Director
of Community Living, City of Sydney
Council
Mr Colin Kay   Coordinator for Redfern
and La Perouse, Indigenous Coordination
Centre
Dr Phil Lambert   Regional Director,
Department of Education & Training
Ms Shirley Lomas   Community representative
Supt Catherine Burn   NSW Police Service,
Local Area Commander
Mr Gary Moore   Director, The Council
of Social Service of NSW
Mr Aldo Pennini   Director Reforming
Human Services Redfern-Waterloo Authority
Ms Lynette Stewart   Community representative
Ms Mabel Chang   Community Representative
M/s Jill Edwards   Community representative
Mr Howard Glenn   Community representative
Mr Dominic Grenot   Community representative
Mr Paul Knight   Community representative
 

Human
Services Fact Sheets:

Human Services Report for
Redfern-Waterloo  (pdf ~1.2mb)
http://www.redfernwaterloo.com.au/other/human_services_report.pd
Inquiry into Issues relating to
Redfern-Waterloo (pdf ~)
http://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/prod/parlment/committee.nsf/0/77220A893AEA0E16CA256F6C00098A80

Cluster Group Reports

Aboriginal Cluster Group (pdf
~214kb)
http://www.redfernwaterloo.com.au/other/aboriginal_cluster.pdf
Health Cluster Group (pdf ~264kb)
http://www.redfernwaterloo.com.au/other/health_cluster.pdf
Families and Children Cluster Group
(pdf ~323kb)
http://www.redfernwaterloo.com.au/other/family_cluster.pdf
Youth Cluster Group (pdf ~176kb) 
http://www.redfernwaterloo.com.au/other/youth_clusters.pdf

This text appeared on 7 October 2005 at http://www.redfernwaterloo.nsw.gov.au/redfern_waterloo_plan/human_services.htm

Sub-sections

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