Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER

Get the latest news to your email inbox FREE!

REGISTER
HomeNewsHospice op shop protest

Hospice op shop protest

By JOLENE OGLE

SUNSHINE Coast Community Hospice Op Shop volunteers have walked off the job and are refusing to return to work until the current board resigns.
Op shop managers Judy Shorland of the Tewantin store and Carol Daly of the Cooroy store shut up shop on Friday 15 July to demand the resignations of the current Sunshine Coast Community Hospice board, responsible for the operation and closure of the local hospice known as Katie Rose.
Ms Shorland and Ms Daly join former volunteers Clytie Glass and Carol Raye to form the Katie Rose Cottage Committee.
Committee spokesperson Ms Raye said the group wanted to call on the community to stand up and support their fight to gain control of the hospice that had been closed due to financial issues since December 2015.
“The hospice board has underestimated the depth of feeling the community has for Katie Rose Hospice,” Ms Raye said.
“We want to re-open the Hospice as Katie Rose Cottage and operate under the original model with a new board.”
Ms Raye said the Katie Rose Cottage committee wanted the current board to step-down so a caretaker board can take control and hold elections for new board members to work towards re-opening the facility under a more volunteer-based model.
Sunshine Coast Community Hospice chairman Dr Frank Lewins said the board would “certainly not be stepping down” and they were considering a range of options to offer palliative care to the community, including building a purpose-built private hospital facility, but Ms Raye said the community didn’t want a private facility.
“The community and volunteers have lost confidence in the board,” she said. “A private facility is not what the Katie Rose hospice is about.”
Dr Lewins said while the hospice was a great service for the community, the model of operation simply wasn’t sustainable.
“The original model of operation was fraught with issues and was unsustainable,” he said.
“There were too many unpredictable factors and the facility needs regular, paid nurses for quality of care.”
Dr Lewins said he wanted to make it clear the board was only considering the option of building a purpose-built private hospital as just one way of offering sustainable palliative care to the community.
“I want to make it clear no formal decision has been made,” he said.
Op shop volunteers have criticised the board, saying they have been kept in the dark about the hospice’s progress, but Dr Lewins said current negotiations and possible partnerships needed to be kept private until something more definite was decided upon.
Dr Lewins confirmed the board is “having discussions with two related health care organisations with the view to longer term palliate care for the community”.
In regards to the criticism of a lack of information, Dr Lewins said the board was involved in confidential negotiations and couldn’t reveal any details at this stage.
“Some people may view our silence as a sign of no action or that we’re up to something, but we have to maintain privacy at this point,” he said.
But Ms Raye said there had been a lack of consultation with the community and was urging locals to withhold their donations to the organisation until the issues were resolved.
“We want the board to heed the community’s and volunteer’s wishes and step-down,” Ms Raye said.
Since closing the doors to the op shops on Friday, the former volunteers have received messages of support with “Stay strong girls” written on the Tewantin store’s front window, plus over 450 signatures and letters of support from local doctors.
Dr Lewins said he believed the op shops will open as soon as possible.
“Given the majority of volunteers are positive about the charity and the board, we are confident we can staff the Cooroy and Tewantin shops,” he said.

Digital Edition
Subscribe

Get an all ACCESS PASS to the News and your Digital Edition with an online subscription

Step into the heart of small town Louisiana

Noosa Arts Theatre (NAT) is thrilled to present Steel Magnolias, a heartwarming and powerful drama set entirely within the walls of a small-town beauty...

Pirates on the move

More News

Pirates on the move

After a pre-season of hard work and preparation it is good to see the Noosa Pirates Rugby League Club well and truly on the...

Dawn ceremony marks rite of passage

More than 100 Year 9 students from Good Shepherd Lutheran College stood barefoot at the edge of the Noosa River Mouth at dawn last...

Clarinet meets guitar

Two outstanding musicians Sacha Gibbs-McPhee and Owen Thompson will follow the history of the guitar when they meet on stage at the...

Tragic loss of 18-year-old surf lifesaver Joe Tolano

The sudden and devastating death of 18-year-old surf lifesaver Joe Tolano has sent shockwaves through the Sunshine Coast and broader surf life saving communities,...

Swimmers on the rise

Two rising Sunshine Coast swimmers have been selected for a prestigious national training camp after strong performances at the Australian championships. Sunshine Coast Grammar School...

Community focused care arrives in Sunrise Beach

Sunrise Beach and the wider Sunshine Coast community will soon welcome a new era of healthcare with the opening of Sunrise Beach Surgery on...

Free repair days

Noosa residents will soon have the chance to give broken household items a second life through a new series of free community Repair Days. Hosted...

Go wild in Canada and Alaska

Snow-dusted peaks. Sapphire lakes. Iconic wildlife roaming the land and cruising the sea. Cities that hum in two languages. Canada and Alaska do not...

Iconic property sold for $15.3m

The property housing one of Noosa’s most iconic beachfront restaurants has changed hands for $15.3 million. The 460sqm commercial property at 75 Hastings Street –...

Community update

From singing and bush care to service clubs and art, there is a wide variety of groups in Noosa. QCWA TEWANTIN NOOSA Everyone is welcome to...