Winter Newsletter 2015 - Kingston Centre for Independent Living
Transcription
Winter Newsletter 2015 - Kingston Centre for Independent Living
Support Broker CEO Autism Care Heritage 2 Health AWT Support Brokerage Ann Macfarlane Fish Out On The River Independent Good Neighbour Supporter Transport Holidays That sign …. Music Therapy Taxicard SEND Blind Man’s Blood Ann Macfarlane Sports & Activities SDS Meeting VI Parliament Healthy Workplace New Website Wheelchairs, Prams and Buses IDDP Summer Winter 2014 2014 edition edition Kingston Kingston Independent Independent Newsletter for Kingston Centre For Independent Living Message from the CEO Lisa Ehlers I was delighted to be appointed the Chief Executive Officer (CEO) for Kingston Centre for Independent Living (KCIL) in September. The past few months have been very exciting and eventful as KCIL looks to continue their vital work in the Royal Borough of Kingston (RBK) and to extend our partnership working with organisations with similar values and beliefs. KCIL’s annual general meeting highlighted the work we have been doing over the past year and strengthened our partnership working with statutory and voluntary services in the local area. The event was held on 21st October at the Holiday Inn in Kingston. The first speaker was Keith Valentine from the Pocklington Trust, who we have been working with on the visual impairment parliament in Kingston. He spoke about the new work in Kingston with regards to improving education, health, transport, social care and employment opportunities for visually impaired people. Simon Pearce, executive head of adult social care for RBK, discussed The Care Act 2015 and its implications for our members as well as opportunities for partnership working in the future. Cathy Maker, CEO from the Richmond Users Independent Living Scheme (RUILS), spoke about our new partnership working with Richmond on the new Independent Supporters Project funded by the Council for Disabled Children. KCIL began work on the new Independent Supporters Project with Richmond disability organisations RUILS and Richmond AID (RAID) in September. As part of my role as CEO, I have been representing the interests of disabled people on various boards and forums as well as developing links within the local voluntary sector, adult services, Achieving for Children (AIC) and the Clinical Commissioning Group (CCG). KCIL continues to work with RBK to plan for the future of the Self-Directed Support (SDS) Service which we have been told will be going out to tender sometime in 2015. We are also developing new links with other organisations with similar values and goals in order to identify other funding opportunities and areas of need in the local area. Over the past six months, KCIL has been working with Kingston’s CCG on personal health budgets and the Special Educational Needs and Disability (SEND) pilot project. We have supported adults and children and their families to take control of their own budgets, write their own plans and to choose their own personal assistants. We would like to welcome our new worker, Jane Ferrier-May, who will be working with children and families on the new education, health and care plans. We would also like to welcome our new support broker, Joanna Aleksy, who began as support broker for the City Bridge Brokerage Project in October. You will find more about both of them later on in the newsletter. I look forward to meeting more of our members and working with you to improve our services and raise the profile of KCIL in the New Year. 2 Heritage2Health at Leith Hill On the 11th of December the Kingston Centre for Independent Living (KCIL) and Kingston Eco–Op users attended another event organised by Heritage2Health. On this very cold day, we got on a minibus at the KCIL office and went to the beautiful Leith Hill near Dorking, with an open fire in every room, amazing views and very friendly people around us. We started off by making some Christmas decorations with help from volunteers from the Kingston University School of Nursing followed by storytelling and Christmas Carol singing. The day finished off with a delicious afternoon tea, a few more stories and taking selfies of everyone who came. The photos will tell you all you need to know. Massive thank you to Heritage2Health for inviting us. 8 3 Support Brokerage Joanna Aleksy, a trained and experienced support broker, joined the team in October and is providing an independent brokerage service. Joanna took over from Sophie Marshall who was our previous broker. This service supports individuals in receipt of Personal Budgets or Direct Payments to make the best use of their money so they can get the most out of it. Among the things Joanna can help with are: 4 • • • • • • • employing a reliable Personal Assistant or agency to support you with your needs benefit advice free services available in Kingston education courses advocacy services carer’s support groups peer support • Information and signposting to other services A word from Fish insurance Founded in 1975 specifically to assist people with disabilities or mobility issues, Fish pioneered “Independent Living Insurance” the cover that protects people who make use of direct payments or other personal budget mechanisms to employ their own personal assistants. A great example of a policy developed in consultation with disabled people themselves, their full cover policy not only offers the liability protection which is a legal necessity but around the clock access to specialist employment law, human resources and health and safety advice. “Direct payments have been a game-changer for many people, really liberating, but they do carry with them their own risks,” explains John Garrard, Managing Director. “Overnight, people go from being passive service uses (recipients of council services) to commissioners of their own care as employers. In legal terms, that’s a massive shift as they must assume the same responsibilities and satisfy the same legislative requirements as many small businesses.” The aim of Fish’s independent living policy is not just to offer straightforward insurance protection but to help policyholders avoid getting themselves into tricky situations by inadvertently breaching for example discrimination or working time laws. It was designed specifically to meet the challenges presented by the changed environment brought about by reform of social care provision. Some of the many benefits included in the Full Cover Independent Living insurance policy are: • • • • • • • • • 24-hour support from the UK’s leading provider of employment law and health and safety services Up to £10 million employment liability insurance cover Up to £5 million public liability cover Redundancy cover Protection against theft by an employee Replacement Personal Assistant (PA) cover Protection against breaches of Health & Safety at Work, Defective Premises and Data Protection legislation Cover for errors and omission by an employee Personal accident insurance Independent Living insurance is just one of a variety of policies offered by Fish who also provide specialist car, travel and home insurance, alongside cover for manual wheelchairs, powered wheelchairs, mobility scooters and in-home products such as stair lifts and hoists. To find out more, visit the Fish Insurance website: www.fishinsurance.co.uk or contact their friendly team of advisers on 0500 432 141. 5 Independent Supporter Jane joined KCIL in September. She completed KCIL induction training and the National Council for Disabled Children’s Independent Supporter training within her first few weeks at the organisation. Jane’s role as an Independent Supporter includes providing advice and support for parents of children with Special Educational Needs (SEN) and young people with SEN through the Education, Health and Care Plan (EHC) processes. Jane can help parents and young people to understand the local referral process and the local offer. She can act on behalf of parents as a named contact person throughout the EHC assessment and planning process. She can help with transferring a Statement of SEN or Learning Difficulty Assessment (LDA) in to an EHC plan. Jane will work with young people and their parents to create a one page profile for the child or young person. She will also support parents, young people and professionals to liaise across a range of local services in order to devise a holistic plan for children and young people. Jane’s role also includes providing parents and young people with information about personal budgets and signposting them to our Self-Directed Support (SDS) Service if they would like to manage their own budgets. She will also refer to other services if the issue is outside of her remit. Jane’s role is independent from the local authority which enables her to provide impartial information and advice to young people and their families. 6 Holidays and Holiday Grants What is it? KCIL administers a fund on behalf of Royal Borough of Kingston which enables disabled people who are resident in the Borough to take holidays. The maximum amount of grant that can be offered is currently £200. To qualify for a grant, an applicant must:Be a resident of the Royal Borough of Kingston. Have a long term and substantial illness or impairment that is likely to last 12 months or more, which severely affects daily life. Be aged over 16. How do I apply? For an application form contact Robert Reilly, KCIL, River Reach, High Street, Kingston, Surrey KT1 1LF. Tel: 020 8546 9603 or visit our website to download an application form: www.kcil.org.uk 7 Music Therapy Sessions at the Hook Centre There is a Music Therapy Service running at the Hook Centre in Chessington which began in February 2014 with the Richmond Music Trust, in partnership with the Kingston Music Service. The Hook Centre is a welcoming community centre with a café, library and a well-equipped Music Therapy room upstairs. Music Therapy can be helpful for anyone with disabilities who is experiencing any difficulties such as anxiety, depression, challenging behaviours or who might be finding it hard to communicate with others. Sessions offer a private space to feel empowered, where each individual is encouraged to express themselves and is offered emotional support by the therapist. Taking part in Music Therapy helps support positive change and enables people to reach their full potential. It builds confidence and encourages physical, emotional, mental and social wellbeing. The Music Therapy Studio offers a range of instruments including drums, many smaller percussion instruments, the guitar and the piano, and individuals will also be supported to use their singing voice. No previous musical experience will be necessary as the Richmond Music Trust’s therapists are trained to enable everyone to make their own music, using the instruments of their choice. Sessions can either be 1:1 with the therapist or in small groups of 4-6 people. There are also opportunities for one-off workshops including drumming circles and vocal groups. The Richmond Music Trust will be offering some free assessment sessions at the start of 2015 so please get in touch with Andreas Rosenboom (Head of Richmond Music Trust) on 020 8744 8097 or [email protected]. SEND The Kingston Centre for Independent Living have been running the Special Educational Needs and Disabilities (SEND) pilot on behalf of Achieving for Children throughout the Kingston Borough for the last few months. Our Support Broker, Sophie Marshall, has been engaging with families to look at their personal budgets and consider the best way of spending this money to appropriately meet each child’s individual needs. So far the biggest achievement of the pilot is supporting a family to implement a personal health budget. As it stands the plan will allow the family to fund a 20% increase in hours weekly, including a full night shift with familiar staff, and access for the child to attend weekly hydrotherapy sessions with his PA. This has all been developed with no additional funding required. The other plans we will be looking to take to panel shortly are mainly concerned with looking at new ways to use the social care direct payment. Many families have reported finding this source of funding vital to their family wellbeing, but believe there should be more flexibility in how it is used. We are currently working with families who are seeking to use this funding for activities that will support their children to engage with their peers as opposed to an adult being employed to take their child out. 8 KCIL will be in discussions with the CCG about maintaining the service in the New Year. So hopefully we will be working to support these families on a more permanent basis in the future. Letter from our Patron, ANN MACFARLANE OBE Dear Readers There are exciting times ahead and tough times too. Kingston’s statutory and third sector organisations are beavering away at providing integrated health and social care services in order to fulfil people’s expectations and preferred choices. Also being discussed in organisations, are plans for the implementation of The Care Act 2015 which comes into force in April 2015 in an economic situation that is exercising the minds of those who are expected to make cuts while maintaining services to users and potential service users. What could result are innovative services more closely in alignment to what service users are requesting or have suggested at various service user meetings. This leads me on to say how important your input is in ensuring these changes are what you need to live a fulfilled life. Your views are vital at a time when organisations are really seeking your ideas and expertise and when we need to co-produce information and services. However, it is not enough to express views. People need to know what action is being developed to bring about appropriate services and to have those services monitored and evaluated. We need to support KCIL in their role of listening to and acting upon your suggestions. KCIL would also like to have your report back on any meetings you attend that relate to changes in health and social care provision as well as leisure, education, employment, physical access and transport. The issues that affect our lives are far reaching and we need people who have direct experience. This includes carers whose issues may differ from those of disabled people and are important to identify in individual and personalised assessments and care plans. KCIL also needs people willing to attend meetings on their behalf. You can expect to be briefed before you go to meetings so you feel confident that you are putting forward a collective view as well as any other relevant issues that may affect you. KCIL would like to hear from you if you would like to become a member or are already a member and would like to volunteer. Please help us to help you; we cannot do it all and we want to ensure people can maintain or improve their independence. With good wishes for 2015. Ann 9 8 SDS User Group Meeting On the 9th December 2014, we held the Self – Directed Support (SDS) User Group Meeting. We started with teas and coffees and a few introductions. The first speaker was Giles Read from Warm Home, Better Health. He was talking about the service they offer which includes a free home check for people over the age of 65 or people with a long–term illness or disability. Anyone who meets the criteria can self–refer to the project which is funded by the Royal Borough of Kingston until March 2015. The service offers free radiator panel reflectors, free water saving devices, free loft and cavity wall insulation, referrals for heating grants for people on certain benefits and free advice on how to stay warm for less this winter. If you would like to benefit from this service, please call 0800 118 2327 for more information. Our second speakers were Nicola and Kate from the Transport Police. They spoke about keeping safe in your home and when going out and about. They also said that the Transport Police and Transport for London will be running a safer bus route “First Route” in the new year where disabled people can take part in trial bus routes around Kingston and Surbiton and practice getting on and off busses and dealing with difficult situations such as drunk people on the bus or what to do in an emergency. Just before our lunch, we had our Christmas quiz and a draw for the SDS User feedback questionnaire. The winners were Colin Shearwood and Saranyan Thiruppathy. We finished off with Lisa Ehlers our CEO updating everyone on a feedback regarding SDS services. We would like to thank our speakers and our users for joining us on that day and hope that everyone had as much fun as we did. 10 The Launch of the Royal Borough of Kingston’s VI Parliament The Visually Impaired (VI) Parliament was created through the early 2013 Kingston’s Vision Strategy Group. Their aim was to assess the services available for people with sight loss and through this, the idea of Kingston having the first ever VI Parliament was born. The VI Parliament hope to be able to continue this good work by establishing good relationships with many different businesses and organisations within Kingston as well as the general public. The VI Parliament was officially launched on 1st September 2014 with the support of the Thomas Pocklington Trust who have been at the forefront of bringing the idea of a VI Parliament to reality. Through the VI Parliament, the MPs will try and improve the level of service and experience when those with a visual impairment need to engage with either the health or social care providers, the Department of Works and Pensions, when seeking employment and social opportunities and safer Travel within the Kingston Borough. The VI Parliament will be holding monthly group meetings when the MPs will meet to discuss any issues that have been raised. There will also be quarterly public meetings the first of which will be on Friday 13th February 2015 at 1pm to 2pm and we welcome all visually impaired people to please come along and let us hear any issues or even offer some ideas on what you would like realised within your local community. Although the MPs who will be working on your behalf have a visual impairment and probably come across services that could be improved, at the end of the day, we would encourage all those who either have a visual impairment or if anyone reading this article knows of someone with a visual impairment, whether through your work of socially to get in touch. The VI Parliament MPs are: Austin Graham - Transport Gloria Tripi - Health Charlie Tavener - Leisure and social activities and events Elise Crayton – Employment Maureen Wing - Education Aims of the VI Parliament The aims of the VI Parliament can be summed up by the word SIGHT as follows: Support - to offer support to people with a visual impairment and raise awareness. Inspire - to inspire those with a visual impairment so that they can achieve many of their goals whether this be through education, employment or living independently. Gather - the VI Parliament, with the help of the visually impaired community, want to gather information therefore improving services within our community. Highlight – to highlight where improvements can be made to all relevant organisations and services such as health, transport, employment, education, social care and Leisure. Teach – to teach awareness of visual impairment and how this affects those living in a sighted world. 11 Healthy Workplace Award Kingston Centre for Independent Living (KCIL) has been awarded a certificate of Commitment from the Greater London Authority for implementing its Healthy Workplaces Charter. They had raised awareness of Health and Wellbeing Good Practice in the workplace including, Healthy Lifestyles, Health and Safety at Work and Attendance Management, by meeting certain criteria. The staff held meetings and events to illustrate how they met the eight areas of criteria. They collated and put together an ‘evidence file’ which was then taken to an event held at City Hall on London’s Southbank earlier this year where our activities and evidence were verified to see if we met the Charter standard. A few days later we were informed that we had successfully met all the Charter standards. On Monday 24th November two staff members, Chief Executive Officer (CEO) Lisa Ehlers and Office Manager Robert Reilly, attended an awards ceremony at City Hall on London’s Southbank, where they and representatives of 20 other organisations, including Kingston Voluntary Action, were presented with their award certificates. KCIL to launch new website in 2015 After several months of development we are excited to announce the launch of our newly designed website in January 2015. We hope you will find it easier to navigate. The new site has been designed to be user friendly on mobile devices, so you can look us up on tablet or on your mobile phone. The new site will include details about our Trustees Board and updated profiles for all the staff. You can also find information on each of the projects that KCIL runs. As well as our own news, you will find useful articles on disability related issues and links to other organisations who support or assist disabled people. There are also all the downloadable resources such as holiday grant application forms, membership forms and our newsletters. Please take a look at the new site and feedback your thoughts good or bad to us. Email your comments to: [email protected]. 12 Wheelchairs, Buses, Prams They do not mix. In pairs, yes, but all together can create a dangerous concoction! Finally, a confrontation has hit the national news. Last month, a woman’s refusal to move her pushchair out of the ‘wheelchair bay’, on a bus in Leeds, had huge effects. A disabled man in a wheelchair, was forced to leave the bus. A case which caused such dismay, it ended up going to be settled in court. This example should be witnessed and learnt from, nationwide. Although the cited case was in Leeds, I know that such confrontations happen regularly, everywhere. Who has priority? Wheelchair users are stated by signs aboard the bus, as having a top priority over prams. However, it seems that priority only exists sometimes... ‘That sign’… …A ‘please’ is a question. Not an order or instruction. There is no rule, but a suggestion… As a disabled, wheelchair-user, myself, I have my own opinion on this topic… There is no stated law on this, so one essentially relies on general public opinion (democratic). It is up to passengers themselves to decide who has priority. Usually ‘fully able-bodied’ passengers will forgo their desires for ‘disabled’ passengers needs. Sometimes their physical position needs highlighting and notifying to themselves. There is no law aiding us wheelchairs, I don’t think that there should be law. If we (wheelchair users) use the law to our gain, and disadvantage of others, we will become even more unpopular. This is not what we need. We want to be positive, pressurizing everyone to help us. I feel that this must work both ways, meaning that us, wheelchair users have to forgo our desires for the needs of ‘fully able-bodied’ passengers. This is rare, but obviously can occur. Wheelchairs must realize that we are only human, and should not be so superior. I think that, as equal human beings on a bus, whoever is in the space first, gets to remain in the space. This is the fairest way. We are only human, like everyone else. If the bus is full, there is no space for more passengers. This is a fact that every human faces. Patrick Goodacre - patrickgoodacre.blogspot.co.uk 13 International Day of Disabled People – The Promise of Technology It is incredibly comforting to know that large-scale organisations such as the United Nations (UN) not only recognise disabilities but also try to raise awareness of it. On 3rd December 2014, Kingston Centre for Independent Living (KCIL) was one of many organisations recognising the International Day of Disabled People (IDDP) which was initially proclaimed by the UN in 1992. Since its first observation, there has been great success in gathering and mobilising awareness and support of disabled people and their rights. Each year, IDDP focuses on a different issue, or theme. The most recent observance in 2014 had the theme of ‘Sustainable Development - The Promise of Technology’. The occasion is intended to have the universal theme of “full participation and equality”, an ideal which encourages recognition of the right of disabled people to live fully-integrated lives with their equals in society and receive an equal share in improvement of conditions through socio-economic redevelopment. One word that often comes to mind when referring to recognising the needs of persons with disabilities is accessibility. Not just wheelchair ramps but a large number of modern technological products such as apps on smartphones and three-dimensional films which may not be as accessible to everyone as desired due to the disabilities and impairments of certain users. In spite of modern-day recognition of disabled people, this still presents an obstacle. The UN General Assembly stresses the point that accessibility for all is pertinent for an all-inclusive society. Accessibility can be described as having the flexibility to accommodate all needs and preferences. While there is often an unspoken pressure to produce a sleek-looking, state-of-the-art app on smartphones, developers may be reluctant to make their products more accessible at the expense of aesthetics. Physical services such as transport infrastructures have seen incredible improvements in accessibility. This is still being improved but assurance needs to be made that all areas are assessed for accessibility and are reviewed to see if further improvements can be made. With the theme of sustainable development pledged by the UN, we can be comfortable in seeing further improvements very soon. On the celebration note. On Wednesday, the 3rd December RBK’s Disabled Staff Group and Kingston Centre for Independent Living were celebrating International Day of Disabled People and the contributions and achievements of disabled people to society. The theme was “Living in a Sighted World – Breaking the barriers with Kington’s Visual Impairment Parliament”. The event was held at Kingston United Reformed Church. The keynote speech was delivered by Keith Valentine from the Thomas Pocklington Trust. Miss Na Won Kim played piano. She incorporated Classical, Jazz and Pop music. 14 Keith Valentine, Na Won Kim, and Lisa Ehlers Equipment For Sale Pride Go Go Elite Traveller LX 12amp Travel Mobility Scooter Any reasonable offer considered. Contact 020 8546 9603 for further details. The Go Go Elite Traveller LX has suspension on the seating for a more comfortable ride. There is a soft touch delta tiller, making the controls easier to operate if the rider has problems with their grip or weaker hands. A travel range of up to 10 miles is achievable. The swivel seat and armrests that fold up means the Pride Go Go Elite Traveller LX Mobility Scooter is easy to get on and off, the adjustable steering tiller enables you to find the most comfortable driving position to suit you. The batteries can be charged on or off the mobility scooter, whichever you find easier. The Pride Go Go Elite Traveller LX Mobility Scooter has wireless controls, which makes taking it apart for travel (and putting it back together again) a simple task. Free Personal Safety Alarms Kingston Centre for Independent Living received a number of Personal Safety. Alarms with Oscillating Dual Sirens and Ultra Bright Torch to give away to residents of Kingston borough. We would like to thank the Kingston Police Community Support Officers for donating the alarms. If you would like to receive one, please contact Robert Reilly on 020 8546 1442 or [email protected]. 15 Who’s Who at KCIL Lisa Ehlers: Chief Executive Officer Tel: 0208 481 1444 Robert Reilly: Administrative Officer Tel: 0208 546 9603 Maria Keskes: Self-Directed Support Administrator Tel: 0208 481 1440 John Morris: Self-Directed Support Administrator Tel: 0208 481 1445 Maureen Wing: Self-Directed Support Outreach Worker Tel: 0208 481 1446 Sophie Marshall: Special Educational Needs and Disability Project Tel: 0208 481 1448 Joanna Aleksy: Support Broker Tel: 0208 481 1442 Jane Ferrier-May: Independent Supporter Tel: 0208 481 1441 John Raitt: Book-keeper Tel: 0208 546 9603 Fax: 0208 546 7947 Web: www.kcil.org.uk KCIL Newsletter brought to you by: Content editor – John Hatherley – [email protected] Graphics editor – Patrick Goodacre – [email protected] 16