Action Spring 2012 Scotland

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Passing on pearls of wisdom

Wilma’s 10,000 ft jump for WRVS

News, p5

News, p4

“WRVS is an amazing organisation” Interview, p6

Monklands money-giving

Red carpet treatment for WRVS PEEBLES

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ervice users and volunteers at Peebles Social Centre were treated to a red carpet day recently thanks to WRVS and Age The gifting ceremony also saw a large number of volunteers presented with long service awards Scotland. Dressed in their finest AIRDRIE Sunday best, 33 people enjoyed a RVS Monklands Hospital at the café and always with a including one for Helen Bonar, full lunch and entertainment. café in Airdrie gifted smile.” Alison also presented a who has been with WRVS for Everyone had a wonderful a fantastic £125,000 to NHS number of long-service awards, 50 years. time, with the raffles being Lanarkshire Trust. The large a particular success. Proving sum of money, raised through that the centre really is a the hard work and commitment great part of the community, of our volunteers, will help the 12-year-old Laura MacLeod trust make a big difference to the raised money for the centre local community. at a local busking festival and donated the whole amount Always with a smile to WRVS. The trust was very grateful for The centre, which has been the gifting. “I am delighted to be running since June 2011, is gifting this huge sum on behalf part of a bigger Borders-wide of WRVS,” said Service Delivery development of 22 social Manager Alison Love. “A massive centres that provide lowthank you must go to the level preventative support in volunteers who work tirelessly Margaret Paterson, left, Head of Services Scotland presents the cheque the community.

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SCOTLAND EDITION

SPRING 2012


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CONTENTS

1-4 5 6 9 10 12 13 14 15 16

Scottish news National news Q&A: With WRVS Chief Executive David McCullough Jubilee recipe competition Our work Leaving a legacy Take two volunteers From the archives A day in the life Get in touch

welcome

“You particularly enjoy the news pages that showcase how we support older people locally”

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elcome to the spring edition of action. We learnt from the reader survey in the last edition that you particularly enjoy reading the Scottish news pages that showcase how we support older people locally. If there’s something happening in your local service that you’d like to see featured, please let us know. Delivering services is the reason WRVS exists. Your work is vital and makes a real difference to the lives of the people we help in our communities and hospitals and I want to extend my special thanks to you all for continuing to provide these excellent services. We are soon to embark on a few changes, which will see us roll out a strong and consistent local structure across the organisation so we can support your work and communicate with you better. This will help us grow as an organisation so that many more older people can benefit from WRVS in the future. Margaret Paterson, Head of Services Scotland

GET IN TOUCH

your letters Thanks for support

Mary Howard-Jones with Chief Executive David McCullough

WRVS visit the National Assembly for Wales Meet, chat and renew – these words sum up the excellent meeting at the Senedd in Cardiff in November. Many volunteers from different parts of Wales met each other for the first time, others renewed long-standing friendships and some of us put faces to names of WRVS staff only ever spoken to on the phone. Hopefully the Assembly Members who attended the event were able to learn more about the work of WRVS and arrange visits to local services. Changes have taken place in WRVS over the years, but without change we would stagnate. Mary Howard-Jones Volunteer Partner

I am currently sitting in Poole Hospital where my sister is fighting for her life. The kind ladies from WRVS in the café on the ground floor have been amazing – not only for the cups of tea but for the hugs, comfort and love. Thank you for such wonderful support in this difficult time. Kerry Andrews

Fond of fair library service I recently started as a volunteer for the Home Library service at Bromley Library and have just received the informative action newspaper at home. I was pleased and impressed to find out that the Home Library service offers a much longer loan period for people and doesn’t fine borrowers if books are late. Darren Roy Cox

In tough times WRVS has been the perfect outlet for me and has kept me going through quite a few difficult times, for which I am eternally grateful. Barbara Tonks Local Service Manager

We tweet news as it happens. Follow us on Twitter @WRVS O WRVS response to Health Committee report: NHS needs to find more sustainable way of funding older people’s care O Today I’m driving someone to their appointment on behalf of the mighty wrvs!! O Well done to @atlanticdash who have arrived in Barbados after rowing across the Atlantic. Thank you for raising money for WRVS O We’re about to reach 3,000 followers! Let’s see what we can do to make it 4,000! Thanks for all the shout outs, follows and retweets everyone

Want to tell us about your good work? Write to us (enclosing pictures for news stories): action Scotland, WRVS Cardiff Gate, Beck Court, Cardiff Gate Business Park, Cardiff CF23 8RP email us: action@wrvs.org.uk

The WRVS vision is a world where every older person has the opportunity and choice to get more out of life


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PEOPLE you

in a nutshell

a handy guide to WRVS services in your area

Dumfries and Galloway Good Neighbours

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umfries and Galloway Good Neighbours volunteers provide companionship, transport and support for older people in the region. The service aims to address loneliness, isolation and lack of independence in a largely rural area, and has over 90 active volunteers.

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Tell us about a friend you’ve made through WRVS

“Thanks to the hard work of the team in Moffat, and the dedication of our volunteers, this service has grown beyond my expectations,” says Locality Manager Adrian Kershaw. The service is always looking for more volunteers, so if you or anyone you know would like to join, please call the recruitment team on 0845 601 4670.

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local

Wishaw General Hospital Escort Service

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olunteers at Wishaw General Hospital Escort Service work tirelessly helping older people and infirm patients reach their x-ray appointments. As a team they are led and co-ordinated by volunteer May Gentles and have around 60 volunteers

registered to the service. “All the volunteers are fantastic and a real tribute to the work of WRVS,” says Service Delivery Manager Alison Love. “I recently visited the service to give my thanks for their hard work and dedication. I was also able to present

say

long-service awards for those who had been with us for over 15 years.” If you know someone special who should be the next Local Hero, then please tell us. See page 16 for contact details.

My WRVS friend is Mary. She is 93 years old and lives in a remote village in Pembrokeshire. She gives me someone to care about outside my family and she assures me that I give her something to look forward to in the long lonely hours. Doug Harvey, Wales I have made a friend and she is my Meals on Wheels buddy Cheryl Thomas. We have a lovely hour together when we are doing Meals on Wheels catching up and checking up on our recipients. It makes volunteering all the more enjoyable. Susie Greenwood, South East Since joining WRVS I have made lots of new friends. I work with the other volunteers training them on disability awareness. If I had to point out one main person who is a good friend it would have to be Alizon Robson, she is a lovely lady. Sharon Geldart, North East Next issue’s question: What are your first memories of WRVS? Send or email your answer, name, photo and details to the address on page 16.


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SCOTTISH NEWS

Blanket coverage A

fter being donated a huge bag of assorted wool, the Darby and Joan Club in Strathaven, South Lanarkshire, decided to make as many blankets as they possibly could. After using up the bag of wool, and with the WRVS volunteers and service users still hooked on the idea, they asked the local community to help by donating either a ball of wool or £1 to help them continue to make blankets. Such was the closeness of the local community, lots of donations were made and this helped the members of the club to make over 200 huge blankets to send to Malawi in Africa.

WRVS help after oil tanker crash

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esilience and Recovery teams in Perth were called into action in January to help local residents after an oil tanker crashed and spilled its load over the road. Over 200 people from the local community had to be evacuated to a rest centre, set up after the accident. Perth Council made a call for WRVS Resilience and Recovery volunteers, and they made sure that everyone was given food and a drink, before those who were evacuated were relocated to a nearby hotel.

Sky’s the limit for Wilma

A passage to India

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Exhilarating and terrifying – WRVS admin assistant Wilma Smith (in red jumpsuit) leaps from 10,000 feet with her jump-buddy

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fter months of waiting, WRVS admin assistant Wilma Smith finally undertook an exhilirating challenge. Wilma jumped from a plane at 10,000 feet and skydived back down to earth, raising money for WRVS – a feat that many of her friends and colleagues thought complete madness.

Local Service Manager Jane McCulloch went with Wilma on the day and said: “After jumping out of the plane I think Wilma’s expectation to feel exhilarated was replaced by sheer terror. Wilma did a great job raising over £600 for WRVS, but has no plans to repeat the adventure soon. Well done Wilma!”

bursary from the WRVS Benevolent Trust enabled Katie Logan to volunteer in India as part of her Duke of Edinburgh Gold Award. Sixteen-year old Katie, who volunteers at Royal Victoria Hospital café, travelled to India to help with the construction of schools and buildings for deaf and blind children, as well as helping in the local missionary hospital. In what turned out to be an exhausting yet rewarding

experience, Katie helped build a school with three classrooms and functioning toilets. “It has been a life-changing experience for me and one I will never forget,” says Katie, arriving back in Scotland. “This would also not have been possible without the WRVS Benevolent Trust bursary and for that please accept my heartfelt thanks, and share in the pride and satisfaction I gained in undertaking this challenge.”


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NATIONAL NEWS nationwide

Let’s get Nationwise New WRVS guides will make the wisdom of older people available to all CAMPAIGN

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ost of us can remember the occasional pearl of wisdom that our mother or grandmother came out with, such as “Never go to sleep on an argument” or “look after the pennies and the pounds will look after themselves”. Nowadays, we can get all the advice we need (and so much more that we don’t) just by looking on the internet. However, we believe that advice is much better when it comes from someone whose opinion you can trust. From our own years of experience, we know that part of the valuable role that older people play in society is to share their wisdom. After all, they have lived through tough times before.

Brenda’s bingo budget Brenda, 74, from Banbury in Oxfordshire shares her budgeting wisdom. “I go to clubs and groups regularly so I separate out the money I need each week and put it aside. That way I know what I have left to play with. “I still save and I’m still careful, although I don’t need to be so much now. My winnings at bingo still go into a pot in case I’m short one week!”

So that’s why we’re developing a range of guides written by older people for younger people. At the same time, we’ll also produce guides that help older people, their families and carers get the most out of life. “Making Britain a great place to grow old isn’t just about helping older people,” says Claire Thwaites, Head of Marketing at WRVS. “It’s also about valuing them and making the most of their experience and knowledge.” If you have a pearl of wisdom you’d like to share, whether it’s serious or light-hearted, let us know. Email nationwise@wrvs.org. uk or write to Nationwise, WRVS, Beck Court, Cardiff Gate Business Park, CF23 8RP. The website wrvs.org.uk/ nationwise will be live from the end of April.

As part of ITV’s Text Santa campaign, the WRVS Hereford Centre was chosen to receive a special makeover from celebrity gardener Diarmuid Gavin. A gifting of £30,000 took place at Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Gateshead. Volunteers at the hospital’s tea bar raised this considerable amount of money. WRVS Monklands Hospital café in Airdrie gifted a fantastic £125,000 to NHS Lanarkshire Trust. This sum of money will make a big difference to the local community and the trust were very grateful for the gifting. Volunteers at Buckinghamshire Home Library service have been recognised for their long-service with Ulverscroft Foundation Certificates of Merit. WRVS has launched a community transport scheme and a new Good Neighbours service in the Plymouth and South Hams region. Nearly 40 WRVS volunteers (some of whom are pictured below) from Wales attended an event at the Senedd to call on Assembly Members to invest more funding in preventative care. WRVS presented Salford Royal NHS Foundation Trust with a cheque for £180,000 during a ceremony at Salford Royal Hospital.


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Q&A

WRVS Chief Executive David McCullough

A few months into his role as Chief Executive, David McCullough invited volunteers and staff to pose any pressing questions they had. We went along to listen to the conversation

“WRVS is such an amazing org What are your initial impressions of WRVS? Incredibly positive. I’ve started off by getting out into the field and meeting people. I always think you get a much better impression of what goes on if you actually talk to people on the front line than when you sit in the office and hear what everyone wants to tell you. I get a really strong sense of energy and positive feeling and good will and a really strong sense of everyone wanting to succeed. People are proud to be part of WRVS and actually want us to do more and have more impact. So I think this is a great place: it feels really friendly, there’s lots of humour, lots of energy and enthusiasm.

need to bring all our services together, and that makes perfect sense to me. The cafés, “People are proud to be part the shops, the trolleys all produce income of WRVS and actually want and give us connection in hospitals and to other services in the community. us to do more” There are some locations which have a good mix of where we’d like to try to Everyone’s conscious of the fact that we’re get to, which is a mix of shops and cafés, in a load of change and it’s been difficult for community and hospital services. We a lot of people, but I think once we get to the have a bunch of other places which have other side, there’s a strong sense of everyone virtually no community services at all wanting to get going, to get on with this. and have almost nothing but shops and cafés. There’s nothing wrong with shops How does retail fit into our new and cafés but that’s not all we’re trying to hub structure? do. Our charitable mission is to provide I think one of the important things we’ve support to older people, so we need to said about this hub structure is that we build services as well as shops and cafés.


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David takes questions from volunteers and staff at January’s Q&A session

Even a Chief Executive knows the benefit of a friendly chat and a cuppa

ganisation” So if I come to you and say my local hospital is looking to have a fantastic new café in a new area they’re building, are you saying I should say “No, we don’t want that. We’re only concentrating on community”? No, I’m not saying that. But, anybody could sell a Mars bar in a hospital, and anybody could sell a cup of coffee. And just to be clear, I’m not being disrespectful about retail, because I’m a retailer by background. So, I want to know: what would be different about a WRVS café? What makes it different from the high street providers? I bet it would have much more personal interaction, it would be a place where


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people could sit and chat, or where families could discover how our services can help their relatives when they come out of hospital. And maybe it’s a place where, in the evenings, hospital patients could come down and have a bit of a book club, or listen to some music… I don’t know. But I know it looks different to a Costa Coffee because it’s full of our wonderful people and our desire to interact and to help and support people, not just sell them a Mars bar. So do you want that new café or not? (Laughs) Yes I do absolutely! I want a new café and I want people to come in it and go “Wow! Look what WRVS has done. It’s amazing, it’s dementia friendly, I love this place: it’s so different”. So yes, absolutely I want it, but I don’t want it if it’s just an imitation of what somebody off the high street can do. Then when we’ve got the café, I’d like some trolley services and some on-ward services; a transport scheme; care for people when they are discharged; Meals on Wheels and lots more! How can we compete against other charities such as Age Concern? The first thing to say is it’s not a competition. There’s more demand than any of us can possibly supply as far as I can see in the next 15 to 20 years. I definitely think we’re the sort of organisation that should work with other people to deliver what the older person wants. So if Age Concern has got a transport scheme in town X, why would we start one? That would be pointless. What we ought to do is look at what other services we could develop that would work alongside the transport scheme. Maybe Age Concern would bring people to our lunch clubs or community centre. I really think we are different and I think we’re incredibly different to Age UK/Age Scotland/Age Cymru, because I think that organisation is increasingly being noisy and complain-y and flogging stairlifts and financial services. I don’t want to be either of those things. WRVS, the sense of us being positive and practical is, I think, perfect. We just crack on and do stuff and we do useful and practical things. Finally David, If you had a magic wand and could use it to fix or change one thing that would help us as we move forward, what would you wish for? This is a bit like Desert Island Discs! Can I have two choices please? I would like us

“I would like us to be the best organisation for volunteers anywhere in the UK”

Biography David took on the post of WRVS Chief Executive in October 2011. He has a professional background in high street retailing and his career has encompassed work with Principles, Next, Saxone and Miss Selfridge. He has led change management programmes at Sears, Equifax and the People Network Limited and held senior management positions in the banking, credit card and IT industries. David is Trustee of the Fairtrade Foundation and prior to his role in WRVS has held non-exec positions as Chair of Café Direct (Guardian Shareholding Company) and Board Director of Just Energy (a South African renewable wind energy company which transfers financial benefits to communities who retain ownership of the land assets).

to be the best organisation for volunteers anywhere in the UK. I’d like everyone to think that if they’ve got some spare time and a bit of experience, they know they can come to us and do something that’s incredibly valuable for society. The second thing, whenever I tell someone I worked with WRVS I’d like them to say “Oh fantastic.” As opposed to: “WSVR... who?” You know, you must all get that, I suppose. WRVS is such an amazing organisation and we’re so big. You know, every time I say to somebody that we have 40,000 volunteers, 2,000 staff, and we work with 100,000 older people, we deliver five million meals and have 500 cafés and shops, they think that’s really amazing! People are absolutely blown away by it. It seems to me we have to work hard to get to the position that people everywhere know and understand what a fantastic organisation this is.


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A right royal feast

DO YOU HAVE A FAVOURITE ORIGINAL RECIPE THAT’S DELICIOUS, NUTRITIOUS AND FIT FOR A QUEEN? GET INVOLVED

Her Majesty The Queen, our royal patron, celebrates her Diamond Jubilee in 2012. To honour the occasion, we’re holding a recipe competition and we’ll be printing a selection of the best entries in the next issue of action. To enter, send us your favourite recipe from the past 60 years and tell us why it’s fit for a queen. If you’ve got a photo of the food on the plate, send us a copy of that too. We will pick three winners (a starter, a main course and a dessert) that will make up our royal menu and each of those winners will receive a £25 Marks & Spencer voucher.

How to enter

Your recipe must be largely original and could be a starter, main course or dessert. Include your name, address, a daytime phone number and send to action@wrvs.org.uk or by post to WRVS action, Beck Court, Cardiff Gate Business Park, Cardiff CF23 8RP, to arrive no later than 30 April 2012.


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OUR WORK

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COMMENT

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Getting the best result for WRVS This is a really critical year for WRVS. There has been lots of excellent work done in thinking about the way our organisation needs to be structured to have maximum impact for older people. But now, we are at a point where the thinking needs to turn into something tangible and real; not just for ourselves but for all those people whose lives we help change for the better. I know that many of your teams are in the middle of consultation about the changes to create hubs where we can bring together all our services to deliver what each person feels will most improve their life. Consultations create uncertainty which is always really difficult – we all wonder about how change will affect us and our families and what it will mean for the people with whom we work. So, my senior team are trying to make sure that everyone will be able to be clear about their future as quickly as possible. At the same time, we need to make sure that the consultations are meaningful and that everyone feels they have had the chance

behind the scenes FEEDBACK

You on action

action editor Craig Burke was delighted by your response to the reader survey we included in the last edition. “Your favourite part is the local news section, followed by A Day in the Life,” he says. “Overall you felt action helped to keep you well informed about WRVS (60% said yes, 35% said sometimes). “We also asked what else you’d like to read about and we received nearly 400 suggestions, so we’ll concentrate on bringing you some of the most popular requests in future editions.

“We can bring together all our services”

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to express their views and influence the results. That’s a very difficult balance and I’m really grateful to all of you for working with us on this process so that we can get the best result for the future of WRVS. Because of our tremendous history and because of the great work you all do, I get the privilege of talking to many people who are influential in the way our system of care for older people works. In the last few months whenever I’ve met these people I’ve talked a lot about our plans for the hubs and without fail everyone I have spoken to has been extremely positive and full of praise for how WRVS is planning for the future. That doesn’t make the changes any easier, but I know you will be pleased that we are building on our history by focusing on how we increase impact in communities and for individuals, and that those changes are widely applauded by well-informed people who understand the challenges we face. I think it’s going to be a great year for WRVS. Thanks for everything that you do. David McCullough, Chief Executive WRVS

PROJECT

Credits for care

million

The number of people over 85 years old in the UK by 2030

“In the meantime, we hope those of you asking for more information about our future plans enjoyed the Q&A with David McCullough article on page 6.” Thanks to everyone who completed the survey and congratulations to Mrs Maureen Parker from Derby. Her response was first out of the hat and that means she is the winner of a £25 Marks & Spencer voucher. Your view on what we do

WRVS gift for Newton Hospital

Text Santa to help WRVS

Impact, p6

News, p4

National News, p5

Arian i Landochau: £50,000

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n ystod Wythnos Genedlaethol y Gwirfoddolwyr fis Mehefin, canmolwyd gwirfoddolwyr Bwrdd Iechyd Prifysgol Caerdydd a’r Fro am eu cyfraniad rhagorol. Diolchodd y bwrdd iechyd hefyd i Wasanaeth Brenhinol Gwirfoddol y Merched (y WRVS) am roi mwy na £50,000 mewn

WRVS and the Royal Borough of Windsor and Maidenhead are joining forces to test Care Bank, a new idea from the Department of Health that will encourage volunteers to help people in the community. The project will award ‘time credits’ which can be redeemed against local products and services such as 50 per cent off swimming or use of the gym in the local authority leisure centre. Minister of State for Care Services Paul Burstow MP (pictured) visited the WRVS York Centre in Maidenhead to launch the year-long trial and met volunteers and service users. WRVS Director of Older People’s Services Angela Geer said: “Volunteering is a two-way street and with Care Bank the rewards are on offer to both parties.”

DONATION

A gift from Text Santa WRVS was privileged to be chosen as one of the charities to benefit from ITV1’s Text Santa appeal and thanks to the viewers’ generosity, we received £686,000 to support our local services. We lost no time in allocating some of the money on festive celebrations for service users at the Cornhill Centre, Banbury, Maes Elsryn lunch club, Llandeilo and the Royal Alexandra Hospital in Paisley. A further amount supported the delivery of 7,620 hot meals over Christmas. Remaining funds will be spent on specific WRVS services in England, Scotland and Wales in agreement with ITV.


action 11 SPECIAL REPORT: Health Committee recommendation

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second guide to... volunteering opportunities

Calls for home care Report says that more older people should be cared for in the community

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he Westminster government’s Health Committee has recommended that a greater number of older people should be cared for in the community, rather than hospitals. This suggestion has come about as the committee looks for ways to relieve pressure on over-stretched NHS resources. “Supporting older people to live independently and healthily in their own homes makes perfect sense all round,” says David McCullough, Chief Executive of WRVS. “The NHS needs to find a more sustainable way of funding older people’s care and a very practical method is by increasing the support for older people within their own community.” Currently, around £2 billion is spent each year on supporting the re-admittance of older people to hospital, and David

Older people and the NHS in England Q The NHS has been challenged to make 4% annual efficiency gains Q Around three quarters of all NHS patients and 60% of hospital admissions are older people Q The number of people aged 65 and over is expected to rise by 65% in the next 25 years to almost 16.4 million. Source: www.parliament.uk in Publications & Records

Farewell to friends Remembering those whom the WRVS family has sadly lost in recent months:

Margaret Blow, Pentre; Elizabeth (Betty) DugganKeen, Sedgefield; Eunice Gill, Derbyshire;

Audrey Goodrich, Sheffield Hospital; Valerie Joy, Cardiff; Pat Linton, Cheshire; Margaret Massey, Liverpool;

believes that reducing this figure should be a priority. “Every day our 40,000 WRVS volunteers work with people who can continue to live on their own because of the support they have received from WRVS in the community,” he says. “Services like befriending schemes, community transport, lunch and social clubs play an enormously important and often under-valued role in helping older people remain physically and mentally well. “We know there are plenty of occasions when care in hospital is the only way for someone to be treated, but we also hear of many older people who end up in hospital almost inevitably, because they are living extremely lonely lives with no real local support to prevent their health from deteriorating physically or mentally.” Joan Metcalfe, Rotherham; Mary Murphy, East Kilbride; Ina Rankine, East Kilbride; Elizabeth Sewell MBE, Ware; Ellen Tomlinson, East Kilbride; Margaret Woodward, Liverpool

What’s changing about volunteering opportunities at WRVS? There will be a greater variety of opportunities for new and existing volunteers. You bring skills and experience to WRVS and we want to match you with opportunities that best suit you, so we can help you get the most out of your volunteering. What if I am happy with what I am currently doing? Then we’d really like you to carry on as you are. We don’t want to stop any services; we’re just changing the way they are managed to make it easier for older people to get the help they need. WRVS has depended on the dedication of volunteers for over 70 years. We value everything you do and want to make it as easy as possible for you to continue to support our work. How can I find out about volunteering in my area? As the hubs are rolled out we will hold meetings for volunteers to let you know about any new opportunities available locally.


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LEGACY

A last act of kindness Volunteer Dorothy Greathead generously left a lasting legacy to WRVS in her will

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orothy Greathead volunteered with WRVS for 19 years, doing duties with Scarborough Meals on Wheels, a lunch club and emergency services. But when Dorothy sadly died, her generosity was extended further and we received a gift from her will in November 2011. Laila Bradley volunteered alongside Dorothy and remembers that supporting older people was Dorothy’s passion. Laila recalls Dorothy telling her about the fantastic

support and friendship she received from WRVS after her husband, Eric, died. She wanted to leave WRVS a legacy as a way of saying thank you. “Dorothy was a very discerning lady, very kind,” remembers Laila. Dorothy has left half of her estate to WRVS to be used in her home town of Scarborough. The legacy comes at such an important time, as we develop new services in the area. Dorothy will be remembered with affection and gratitude Dorothy Greathead (pictured left with her friend Mary Hirst) was a devoted volunteer for 19 years and left money to WRVS in her will by everyone here at WRVS.

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e are eternally grateful for gifts in wills, as they help to ensure that we can support older people in the future. If you would like to include WRVS in your will, many people find it is easier to leave a small percentage. For example, leaving 1% of your estate to a charity means that you can still leave loved ones 99% and you won’t have to revisit solicitors should any circumstances change.

A gift to remember

To find out more and to request your free legacy brochure please call Amy on 029 2073 9096

gift to remember

Make it a


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TAKE TWO VOLUNTEERS

Christine Shenton

Joan Ellis

“There’s always someone at WRVS who can get a problem fixed” Christine Shenton and Joan Ellis volunteer at our Staffordshire Hub. Since the launch of the new structure, Christine has started to do something new, while Joan still enjoys helping out in the hub café

Christine Shenton

Joan Ellis

How did you get into volunteering? I’ve known of WRVS for quite a while, through relatives who have been supported by them. When I retired I visited the hub to see if I could be of any help. I started out volunteering on the reception desk, but I am now also an outcome co-ordinator.

How did you get into volunteering? When I retired I wanted to do something worthwhile. I had walked by the WRVS Hub two or three times before I decided to pop in and find out more. I volunteer in the café, serving at the counter and bringing people over their food.

When the new structure came in what made you decide to take on extra volunteering? I thought it was something interesting that I could do. I go out on home visits to older people’s houses. I see if there is anything they need that would improve their quality of life. It’s basically about talking and listening.

You haven’t changed your role since the new structure came in, have you? No, I am happy doing what I do. I enjoy meeting people and getting to know the regular customers. Before I retired I worked in a post office, and it was similar to this, in terms of the type of people I would meet.

Why do you volunteer for WRVS? I find it very satisfying. It’s nice to be able to help people out, or put something right. There’s always someone I can turn to in WRVS to set the wheels in motion to get a problem fixed.

Why do you volunteer for WRVS? I get to chat with lots of different people. Their conversation brightens up my day. In fact everyone who comes in, both customers and volunteers, always seem to be in such a positive mood that it can’t help but make you feel happy too.


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From the archive A WVS Domestic Advice Bureau, set up in the foyer of a shop during World War II. From 1940 to the late 1990s, our offices across the country were a one-stop shop for information on any subject, from where to obtain emergency clothing to how to repair a leaking tap

? Do you know where to find a complete set of essential WRVS policies? ? How do you know if the expenses claim form you use is up-to-date? ? How will we support you during your first 12 months as a WRVS volunteer?

Essential information at your fingertips Online facility has all the WRVS forms and documents you need

The WRVS document library is the answer to all your questions You will find all the documents you need, from must-read policies that we all have to follow, to processes that help us know what to do and practical things such as forms so that we can claim expenses. You don’t have to know the document name as you can easily search by keywords, such as ‘expenses’. If you can’t find the document you want, please tell us so that we can add it.

Every volunteer can use the document library. Simply go to My WRVS (wrvs.org.uk/ my-wrvs) and log in or create an account if this is your first visit. Once you are logged in, go to the ‘forms and tools’ section where you’ll find a page about the document library, and a link to help you find the documents that you need. Don’t have your own computer? Remember, you can use public computers in libraries to get to the document library, or ask your local service manager for a hard copy of any document you need. wrvs.org.uk/my-wrvs Use your smart phone to get straight to the log-in page of My WRVS with this QR code.


action 15

A DAY IN THE LIFE

Helen provides the picture and her patients add the colour

“It’s about finding out what they want to do” Helen France is a volunteer on the dementia section at Sheffield Northern General Hospital

M

y role is really all about talking to the patients on the dementia section. I provide them with a bit of company and help them reminisce about their past. Some of them don’t receive many visitors, so we feel it’s up to us to help keep them interested and stimulated. I volunteer on Monday mornings and my day starts at the hospital at around about 10am. We don’t really have a set routine, as it’s all about finding out what the patients in the section want to do. A lot of the time that can be simply having a nice chat with them about their family and the life they have lived. However, we also arrange various activities. A couple of weeks ago we ran an

art session. Through that I found that the patients actually got more enjoyment out of colouring in pictures rather than drawing one themselves. So now I am the one who draws the pictures and then they provide the colour. Sometime we’ll work directly with patients in a particular bay, but other times we will set out a table in the ward and let those who are interested come over and join in. My day usually ends at around 12pm, depending upon whether or not I am helping get the patients ready for their lunch. It’s a rewarding way to spend my time, and I take particular satisfaction when someone I chatted to the previous week remembers me.

The art of therapy I got into volunteering back in November through my current job at the WRVS shop in the hospital. I have always been interested in art therapy and I felt that helping out on the ward would give me a chance to explore that a little more. It’s great to watch the patients getting into art, and I like to think that what we do makes their day a little bit brighter.


CONTACTS SCOTLAND

SCOTLAND

Ray Koralewski Liverpool, North and HEAD OF SERVICES North East Lincolnshire, Margaret Paterson North Yorkshire and margaret.paterson@wrvs.org.uk East Riding of Yorkshire 07714 898679 ray.koralewski@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898710 SERVICE DELIVERY MANAGERS Elaine Goldie Paul Taylor Argyll & Bute, Highlands, South and West Yorkshire Western Isles and Calderdale elaine.goldie@wrvs.org.uk paul.taylor@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898527 07714 898589

Grahame Rose Lothian, Fife, Forth Valley and Orkney grahame.rose@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898597 Jean Trench Borders, Arran, Dumfries & Galloway, Ayrshire jean.trench@wrvs.org.uk 07718 982790 Josephine Mill Grampian, Tayside, Shetland josephine.mill@wrvs.org.uk 07834 482361

NORTH EAST & CUMBRIA HEAD OF SERVICES Chris Graham chris.graham@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898667 SERVICE DELIVERY MANAGERS Derek Hails County Durham and Darlington, Tees Valley and Cumbria derek.hails@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898525 Carol Nevison Northumberland, Tyne and Wear and Sunderland carol.nevison@wrvs.org.uk 07736 184341

NORTH EAST & CUMBRIA NORTH WEST, YORKSHIRE & HUMBERSIDE

Melissa Cartwright Lancashire and Sefton melissa.cartwright@wrvs.org.uk 07786 635162

MIDLANDS WALES

WALES

SOUTH & SOUTH WEST

HEAD OF SERVICES Sally Rivers sally.rivers@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898571

SERVICE DELIVERY MANAGERS Trish Hughes ruth.nice@wrvs.org.uk South West Wales 07714 898572 trish.hughes@wrvs.org.uk 07590 776027 Sharon Sinclair Birmingham and Black Country Wendy Marshall sharon.sinclair@wrvs.org.uk South East Wales 07714 898611 wendy.marshall@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898670 EAST & SOUTH EAST INTERIM SERVICE DELIVERY MANAGER Angela Perrin North Wales angela.perrin@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898578

MIDLANDS HEAD OF SERVICES Sam Ward sam.ward@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898602 SERVICE DELIVERY MANAGERS Jenifer Ainsworth Leicester, Northampton & Rutland and South Lincs (South Kesteven, South Holland, Boston Borough) jenifer.ainsworth@wrvs.org.uk 07919 991544

HEAD OF SERVICES Debbi Fair debbi.fair@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898676 SERVICE DELIVERY MANAGERS Esther Gillespie Essex and Hertfordshire esther.gillespie@wrvs.org.uk 07786 635179 Heather James Kent, Medway, and East Sussex heather.james@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898688 André Knirsch London andre.knirsch@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898562 Nikki Soyza

NORTH WEST, YORKSHIRE Joanne Edwards Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire Derbyshire, Nottingham and North & Cambridgeshire & HUMBERSIDE HEAD OF SERVICES Sue Collins sue.collins@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898599 SERVICE DELIVERY MANAGERS Helen Hailstone Manchester, Wirral and Cheshire helen.hailstone@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898522

Lincs (West Lindsey, East Lindsey, Lincoln and North Kesteven) joanne.edwards@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898546 Lynn Hensman Staffordshire and Birmingham lynn.hensman@wrvs.org.uk 01782 213489 or 0778 6635164 Ruth Nice Herefordshire, Worcester and Warwick

EDITOR Craig Burke action@wrvs.org.uk Tel: 029 2073 9014

nikki.soyza@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898615

Karen Barford West Sussex, Brighton & Hove and Surrey karen.barford@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898534 Toni Lancaster Norfolk and Suffolk toni.lancaster@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898530

EAST & SOUTH EAST

SOUTH & SOUTH WEST HEAD OF SERVICES Steven Hargreaves steven.hargreaves@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898563 SERVICE DELIVERY MANAGERS John Clifford Somerset, Bristol, Gloucester, Swindon and Wiltshire john.clifford@wrvs.org.uk 07545 925757 Margaret Lawson Oxford, Berkshire and Slough margaret.lawson@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898551 Irena Wasylowsky Hampshire and IOW irena.wasylowski@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898549 Amanda Whitlock Cornwall, Devon and Dorset amanda.whitlock@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898658

WRVS ASSOCIATION & SCOTTISH ASSOCIATION A friendly link for retired WRVS volunteers. For further information please contact WRVS Association 15 Priory Street York YO1 6ET Scottish Association Mrs Jilly Fraser-Malcolm Tree Tops 9 Allanwood Court Bridge of Allan Stirlingshire FK9 4DS

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WRVS VISION A world where every older person has the opportunity and choice to get more out of life. WRVS PURPOSE To deliver practical support through the power of volunteering so older people can get more out of life. WRVS Beck Court, Cardiff Gate Business Park, Cardiff CF23 8RP Tel: 029 2073 9000 wrvs.org.uk Registered charity number 1015988 and SC038924 JOIN US, SUPPORT US To find out about volunteering opportunities with WRVS call 0845 601 4670 To make a donation to support our work call 0845 607 6524 WRVS BENEVOLENT TRUST For volunteers in sudden financial need. 26 Pound Lane, Isleham, Ely, Cambridgeshire, CB7 5SF PUBLISHER Published on behalf of WRVS by Think, The Pall Mall Deposit, 124-128 Barlby Road, London W10 6BL www.thinkpublishing.co.uk Publishing editor: Jack Kibble-White Regional editor: Andrew Cattanach Sub-editor: Andrew Littlefield Art director: Alistair McGown Publisher: John Innes Managing Director: Polly Arnold PAGE ADVERTISING Craig Burke 029 2073 9014 INSERT ADVERTISING Tom Fountain 020 8962 1258 or email tom.fountain@thinkpublishing.co.uk © 2012 WRVS. All rights reserved. Every reasonable endeavour has been made to find and contact the copyright owners of the images and works included in this newspaper. However, if you believe a copyright work has been included without your permission, please contact us at action@wrvs.org.uk WRVS action is printed on FSC paper coming from a well-managed forest. The publishers cannot be held responsible for loss or damage to unsolicited manuscripts or photographs. Views of contributors and advertisers do not necessarily reflect the policy of WRVS nor those of the publishers.

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Alison Love Greater Glasgow and Lanarkshire alison.love@wrvs.org.uk 07714 898596

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