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Mission Australia

Mission Australia


Last Updated: 11/30/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 27
Sign: Capricorn

State: New South Wales
Country: AU
Signup Date: 9/19/2007

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Monday, October 26, 2009 

Category: MySpace
ANNOUNCEMENT: Mission Australia is leaving MySpace.

Unfortunately our page has a bug that we have tried to report to MySpace. While we would love to keep networking with you, we cannot continue without any technical support - see below for more information*

To continue your support of Mission Australia please visit us on Facebook, Twitter or go to http:../../..www...missionaustrali..a.com.au/

Regards,
Mission Australia

*THE BUG: Despite following the recommendations.. to submit a request (reporting a bug using the 'salute' method) MySpace does not provide any response even after multiple requests for assistance - please note this for any technical issues you may experience.

Our final resort was to contact Tom Anderson and MySpace Australia but these emails are still 'ignored' according to the MySpace Mail system.

We have little choice but to finish our activities on this page. We are very disappointed as we have loved being able to keep in contact and provide a place on MySpace for you to support our causes.

To continue your support of Mission Australia please visit us on Facebook, Twitter or go to http:../../..www...missionaustrali..a.com.au/
Saturday, August 01, 2009 
We are now hosting our daily blog updates at officialmissionaustralia.blogspot.com

Regards,
Mission Australia
Monday, July 13, 2009 

Category: News and Politics

Banner

Mission Australia's intrepid supporter - 21 year old Japanese cyclist, Yohei Takahashi – arrived today in Perth after an amazing 7000km journey from Brisbane! Riding in support of Mission Australia’s Youth Services, Yohei’s inspirational trip saw him battle rain and wind on a diet of bread, noodles and water, and a ‘luxury’ can of cola a day.

To get behind Yohei and help him achieve his $7,000 fundraising goal, visit his fundraising page at this link: Sponsor Yohei!
Friday, July 10, 2009 

Category: News and Politics


Earlier this week ABC TV's 7.30 Report ran a story on Mission Australia's Pasifika - a successful juvenile justice program our organisation ran in south west Sydney until recently.

Every day across Australia around 1,000 young people are held in detention. With state governments increasingly imposing tougher bail on young offenders detention numbers are at a four year high and costs are spiralling. Pasifika shows how the problem can be solved for a fraction of the price.

To view the full 7.30 Report story, please click here.

Wednesday, July 08, 2009 

Category: News and Politics


Mission Australia will today unveil plans to build a brand new residential service for aged homeless people in Sydney, after being awarded a $16 million capital grant by the federal government. Residents will have permanent accommodation in the new service.

The announcement will take place opposite the proposed site at 47 Redfern Street, (corner of Elizabeth Street), Redfern at 1pm on Thursday 9 July.

Mission Australia NSW Director, Leonie Green, will explain the plans for the new development and Federal Minister for Housing, The Hon Tanya Plibersek MP, will outline how the initiative will contribute to the government’s commitment to reducing homelessness in line with its White Paper, The Road Home - A National Approach to Reducing Homelessness.

The announcement also coincides with the release today of an Australian Institute of Health and Welfare report, Counting the Homeless, showing that the number of homeless people aged 55 and over increased by more than 30 percent nationally between 2001 and 2006 and more than 33 percent in NSW. The report, which is based on 2006 Census data, is widely regarded as the most accurate count of homelessness in the country.

People are considered to be part of the mainstream aged population if they are 65 or over. However, due to the health consequences and premature aging associated with homelessness, homeless people aged 55 and over (45 for Indigenous people) are considered elderly.

“The number of elderly homeless is ballooning and we’ve been ill-equipped to provide the specialised services they need to live a safe, secure and dignified life,” said Leonie Green, Mission Australia NSW Director.

“By investing in this new service, we’ve taken a leap forward in our efforts to reduce the number of homeless older people.

“When the new service comes on line it will more than double Mission Australia’s permanent accommodation places for elderly homeless people in NSW. Women will benefit particularly because we’re the only organisation in the heart of Sydney that has aged care places for elderly homeless women and there will be more places available thanks to this new development.”

According to Ms Green, elderly homeless people have very different needs from those accessing mainstream aged care or homeless services and so the new building has been designed with this in mind.

“The designs draw on the best practice, research, and evidence in both aged care and in homeless services, including our own multi-award winning aged homeless service, Charles Chambers Court.

“The accommodation is provided in ‘pods’ to help create small communities within the larger group and each pod of twelve rooms will have a dining area and lounge. There is also a roof-top garden and social spaces in the design.

“We know from our existing services that most elderly homeless people have no contact with their family and limited social networks and so building a sense of community is incredibly important to their wellbeing and mental health.

“Suicide is sadly one of the top causes of death amongst older homeless people so the importance of looking after the mental health of our clients can’t be underestimated.

“Unlike most aged care facilities, many of our clients will have a mental illness or acquired brain injury when they are referred to us, and they are far more likely to arrive having experienced much higher levels of illness because of a lack of adequate shelter, unsanitary living conditions, and malnutrition.

“We’ve taken all of this into account in our plans. This development will not only provide a roof over their head, it we’ll provide the full range of support mechanisms.

“A registered nurse will be onsite seven days a week and through our existing partnerships residents will be able to access doctors, pharmacists, and psycho geriatricians to name just a few. This will allow us to care for people over a long period of time even if their already serious health issues get progressively worse – in other words what is referred to in the industry as ‘aging in place’.”

Mission Australia unveils plans for new $16M Aged Homelessness Service

    Where: Redfern Park
    Opposite Mission Australia building
    47 Redfern Street (Corner of Elizabeth) Redfern.
    If weather is inclement, event will be moved to the Community Room
    Redfern Oval, Redfern Street.
    When: 1 - 1.30pm, Thursday 9 July
    Who: Tanya Plibersek, Minister for Housing
    Leonie Green, Mission Australia NSW State Director
    Jill Bicknell, Service Manager, Charles Chambers Court
    (Mission Australia Award Wining Aged-Homeless Service)

Other media opportunities:
    Artist’s impressions of the proposed development and plans of the development
    Filming opportunity in Charles Chambers Court of existing aged homeless care service 11 Hunt Street, Surry Hills
    Interview with current resident of Charles Chambers Court
Media Contact: Patrick Flynn, Mission Australia 02 9641 5031, 0407 411 256



A
rchitect's impressions of the finished facility:

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Clockwise from top left: front view, aerial view, rear entrance, front entrance.
Tuesday, July 07, 2009 

Category: News and Politics


An innovative and exciting training program for disadvantaged and unemployed youth, with a focus on Aboriginal young people, will be a feature of Charcoal Lane - a unique social enterprise restaurant opened in Fitzroy in today.

Charcoal Lane has been developed by Mission Australia with support from the Victorian Government and the Victorian Aboriginal Health Service (VAHS). It combines the social enterprise restaurant with a transitional labour market program designed to empower disadvantaged young people to develop professional and life skills to transition into a successful career in hospitality.

Mission Australia State Director Paul Bird said Charcoal Lane is a project that will bring so many positives to the Victorian community.

“Not least of these positives is offering young disadvantaged people the opportunity to be trained in a skill that will boost their self-esteem and provide them with a skill they can use wherever they were in Australia or overseas,” Mr Bird said.

“The training program, being delivered by William Angliss Institute of TAFE, will enable Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal disadvantaged young people – trainees and apprentices – to develop the professional and life skills needed to transition into a career in hospitality.

“Melbourne has an international reputation for its food and wine culture, so being able to deliver
training in this area and provide a unique dining experience that celebrates Aboriginal cuisine makes Charcoal Lane an outstanding project that is fully endorsed by the Victorian Government.”

Mr Bird said Charcoal Lane offers a high-quality dining experience to discerning Melbournians and interstate and overseas visitors.

“It is an opportunity for people to experience Aboriginal culture through food,” Mr Bird said.

“Of equal importance is that Charcoal Lane will also provide life skills, work experience, training and pathways into hospitality careers for both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal young people.

“Trainees and apprentices who complete their training will be invited to apply for positions at Charcoal Lane and partner employers to further progress their careers in hospitality. Just like Melbourne embraces international cultures and celebrates them through food, Charcoal Lane is about reconciliation and understanding through food.”

The historic building at 136 Gertrude Street, Fitzroy, formerly a bank, post office, medical clinic and most recently an Aboriginal health service, has been transformed into a new restaurant and upstairs training kitchen.

Charcoal Lane was a significant local meeting place in Victorian Aboriginal history, most recently
documented in Aboriginal performer Archie Roach’s 1999 song and album of the same name.

The local Aboriginal community suggested to Mission Australia that the restaurant and training program be called Charcoal Lane to reconnect the building with the area’s Aboriginal history.

Mission Australia acknowledges the generous support of the Victorian Government, the Victorian Aboriginal Heath Service and the Aboriginal Advisory Group.

Charcoal Lane opens to the public for lunches on Tuesday 14 July, with full service expected to be up and running in early August. For advance bookings call: (03) 9418 3400 or visit www.charcoallane.com.au.

Media Contact: Phil Smith (03) 8317 0111 or 0407 860 528.
Monday, July 06, 2009 

Category: News and Politics


Like many community service organisations Mission Australia can only exist with the support of volunteers like Malcolm Senior - incredibly generous people willing to give their time and efforts to make a difference in the lives of others.

Malcolm Senior – who sadly passed away last fortnight aged 87 – was a man characterised by a passion and commitment to helping people in need, attributes which saw him volunteer for Mission Australia for almost 25 years.

Malcolm will be greatly missed by the many people within Mission Australia who had the pleasure of working alongside him.

Malcolm first volunteered with the Sydney City Mission in the early 1980s. As an experienced coach driver, he volunteered his time driving bus loads of aged clients on day trips out of the city.

In 1993, Malcolm offered to provide a free courier service within Sydney's CBD for Mission Australia. He was a man completely dedicated to his work and would continually go above and beyond what was expected of him making regular trips to Mission Australia services in Mount Druitt, Green Valley, and Sefton – locations well outside the CBD.

Even after a quadruple bypass Malcolm was keen to keep volunteering and only agreed to rest up and spend more time with his beloved wife Edna after many suggestions from Mission Australia.

But even then Malcolm still found time to work for Meals-on-Wheels and Mission Australia from time to time.

Malcolm was a remarkable man who led an incredible life, helping everyone around him along the way. On behalf of the hundreds of people who Malcolm helped over the years, and on behalf of our staff, Mission Australia would like to publicly thank and honour Malcolm Senior. Our condolences are with Malcolm’s wife Edna.
Monday, July 06, 2009 

Category: News and Politics


For the last six years the National Drug and Alcohol Awards have been held as a final event of Drug Action week. The NDAA are held to honour the dedication and innovation within the Alcohol and Other Drug (AOD) sector.

This year TCF was nominated for “Excellence in services for Young People” and out of a very completive field were named one of three finalists and invited to the Gala Dinner, held in the Grand Ballroom, Parliament House Canberra.

Triple Care Farm was named the winner of the Excellence in Services for Young People award.

There were around 300 guests from throughout Australia at the Gala Dinner hosted by The Hon. Nicola Roxon Minister for Health and Ageing. There were also representatives from the AER Foundation, Australian Government: Department of Health and Ageing, Australian Government: Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations, ACT Health and The Pharmacy Guild of Australia.

The National Drug and Alcohol Awards is a collaborative effort of the Ted Noffs Foundation, the Alcohol and Other Drugs Council of Australia, the Australian Drug Foundation and the Australian National Council on Drugs.

This award is a fantastic acknowledgment of the work Triple Care Farm does to support young Australian’s to make real and lasting change in their lives.

Acceptance Speech
“Thank you so much. It is a wonderful thing to accept this on behalf of the team at Mission Australia’s Triple Care Farm.

A growing number of young people are faced with and overcoming our communities most difficult challenges: addiction, mental illness, homelessness, unemployment, violence, trauma and disconnection. At an age where most Australians are forging an identity and building their future, these young people are struggling to survive.

Mission Australia’s Triple Care Farm has always sought to be a safe place for young people to make change, guiding them on a pathway through a successful youth.

A place where who you are is more important than where you’re from or what you’ve done. A place where it’s okay to be afraid of the dark but there is no reason to be. Where having a voice is valued, and there is space to make a change.

Thank you to Mission Australia for their continued strengthening of the program to met young people where they are at.

To our corporate and community partners, particularly Sir David Martin Foundation, thank you for your heartfelt generosity and connectedness with the work.

To our government partners thank you for recommitting to resourcing the program.

Thank you to the amazing team of staff and volunteers at Triple Care Farm for their genuine compassion, their tirelessness even when they are tired, their patience with the process, and their eagerness to acknowledge achievement.

Finally I’d like to dedicate this award to the courageous young people who are willing to change and the resilience of the communities who support them. Thank you”

More Information about the Award from the National Drug and Alcohol Website
www.drugawards.org.au

2009 Awards
Now in its sixth year, the National Drug and Alcohol Awards (NDAA) honour the dedication and innovation within the Alcohol and Other Drug (AOD) sector. Award finalists and winners were announced at the Gala Dinner at the culmination of Drug Action Week, Friday 26 June 2009 in the Great Hall of Parliament House in Canberra.

The hosting of the National Drug and Alcohol Awards is a collaborative effort of the Ted Noffs Foundation (TNF), the Alcohol and other Drugs Council of Australia (ADCA), the Australian Drug Foundation (ADF), the Australian National Council on Drugs (ANCD).

The NDAA was sponsored by the AER Foundation, Australian Government: Department of Health and Ageing, Australian Government: Department of Education, Employment and Workplace Relations, ACT Health and The Pharmacy Guild Of Australia.

Excellence in services for young people (from the NDAA website)
This award recognises that young people are important and any service/organisation that targets young people is eligible to apply. It is not just limited to alcohol and drug-specific services, but includes any service/organisation that has an impact on the alcohol and drug use of young people.

Judging criteria — that the service:
• is based on good practice and/or research evidence
• recognises participation as vital, and involves young people in as many phases of the project as possible (ie developmental, intervention delivery, evaluation)
• values monitoring and evaluation, and has as been found to have a positive impact on the lives of the young people involved.

Friday, July 03, 2009 

Category: News and Politics


A new era in employment services for Adelaide begins today with the launch of the new youth-focused Mission Australia Employment Solutions centre in Elizabeth.

The South Australian Minister of Employment, Training and Further Education, Michael O'Brien, will launch the office this morning.

Mission Australia’s Executive Leader of Employment Services, Leisa Hart, will attend the launch, along with about 60 local employers and a group of young job seekers.

Ms Hart says the Elizabeth site is one of 93 Mission Australia has been contracted to provide across the country under the Federal Government’s new Job Services Australia (JSA) scheme, which came into effect earlier this week.

However, Ms Hart said the Elizabeth service was one of three the organisation would provide across the country with a specific focus on young unemployed people.

“In awarding its JSA contracts, the Federal Government identified particular regions where youth unemployment is particularly high and young people were vulnerable,” Ms Hart says.

“Young people in Elizabeth and the greater Playford area historically have had difficulty in finding a job, and the global financial crisis has not helped their efforts.”

Statistics from the Northern Adelaide Employment Service Area – which includes the region covered by the new Mission Australia site at Elizabeth – indicate the unemployment rate in the area is 9.1 per cent (March 2009), compared with 7.3 per cent in the area covering central Adelaide and 6.3 per cent across South Australia. It is the third highest unemployment rate in employment service areas around the country.

However, Ms Hart says that according to the most recent available employment figures for the City of Playford – which were released as part of the Australian Bureau of Statistics’ 2006 Census – youth unemployment across Elizabeth and surrounding suburbs was between 25 and 33 per cent.

“If youth unemployment rates were above 30 per cent in some of these areas while Australia was experiencing the economic boom three years ago, it’s likely they are much higher in these tough times,” Ms Hart says.

“Mission Australia’s employment services are about helping employers determine who and what they need, and to link them with the many Australians looking for long-term jobs.

“But at our youth at risk sites – including Elizabeth – we’ll be doing much more to give young job seekers the skills, training and confidence required to ensure they are ready to seek, find and keep jobs.”

Ms Hart says Mission Australia has a network of people and services who work with young people at risk in the Elizabeth area to help them overcome barriers to employment such as inadequate family and accommodation support, drug and alcohol problems, and insufficient formal education qualifications.

“Mission Australia will work with these services to ensure Elizabeth’s young job seekers are prepared for interviews and confident in their ability to win and sustain the jobs they seek.”
Thursday, July 02, 2009 

Category: News and Politics


Recently the Daily Telegraph recorded a video of the new Missionbeat Bicycle service in action on the inner streets of Sydney - come and take a look at the guys in action, providing assistance to homeless people in need:

Please click here to be redirected to the video.