Engage Aotearoa

Category Archives: News

Community Consultation on The Ministry’s Mental Health and Addiction Service Development Plan

The Ministry of Health is releasing for stakeholder consultation Rising to the Challenge: The Mental Health and Addiction Service Development Plan 2012 – 2017.  The purpose of the Plan is to provide direction for mental health and addiction service delivery across the health sector over the next five years, and to clearly articulate Government expectations about what changes are needed to build on and enhance gains made in the delivery of mental health and addictions in recent years. The Plan incorporates key themes from Blueprint II and advances the Government’s focus on better performing public services. The plan has also been informed by input from preliminary sector consultations.

The consultation period will run from 8 October 2012 to 2 November 2012.  Feedback closes on Friday 2 November 2012 at 5.00 pm. Please note that any feedback forms received after this time will not be included in the analysis of feedback.

How to respond

You can respond using the consultation response questionnaire attached to the consultation document. Email your local coordinator to request a consultation document and feedback form.

Attend a regional consultation workshop in your region during October.

You may already be aware of these meetings.  If not, please email the contact person identified for further details if you wish to attend.

Your views and feedback are welcome and can be provided:

a) by email to:  SDP@moh.govt.nz

b)   in writing to:  April-Mae Marshall, Mental Health Service Improvement Group,  Ministry of Health,  PO Box 5013,  Wellington.

All feedback forms will be acknowledged by the Ministry of Health and a summary of feedback will be sent to all those who request a copy. We look forward to your feedback which will assist us to finalise this document.

Engage Group Full for 2012

Engage Group is a free education and support programme for people of any age who struggle with the limiting effects of anxiety in any form.

The next programme gets underway at Youthline in Ponsonby, Auckland on Wednesday October 3rd with a full group who will spend the next ten weeks together exploring ways to overcome anxiety and supporting each other through.

Enrolments are now closed for 2012. But to make sure you don’t miss out on the opportunity to enrol next year, contact Youthline’s special services centre on (09) 361 4168 or services@youthline.co.nz to add yourself to the waitlist.

More information can be found on the Engage Aotearoa website at the following link:

www.engagenz.co.nz/?page_id=85 

Regional Consumer Network Re-Brand: Welcome Changing Minds

Changing Minds, Changing Brands

September 17th marked the first release of the new name for what we have come to know of as Regional Consumer Network.

Changing Minds worked with members of the network to come up with the best new name for the organisation.  More than one hundred participants voted for their preferred name. Since then, the Council for Mental Wellbeing Trust, the Reference Advisory Group, staff, and a number of other individuals have worked on the new look, including the by-line.

In order to reflect the organisation’s commitment to our Maori members they have included the whakatauki “Te Pae Tawhiti o te Hinengaro” – literally translated as: searching the horizon of changing minds.  Not only is this a whakatauki, but can be seen as a translation of the new name.

Another feature is their by-line: Strengthening Self-determination. This is something that the new-look organisation is very focused on – working on strengthening the voice of service users to ensure that people are treated fairly, with dignity and respect, and that every individual is given opportunity to live their life in the way in which they choose whether they have a diagnosis of a mental health issue or not.

You can reach the Changing Minds team now by emailing:

tina@changingminds.org.nz (manager)
campbell@changingminds.org.nz (newsletters, updates, media watch)
joey@changingminds.org.nz (forums, youth project)

Legal Responsibilities of Community Organisations in New Zealand

Keeping It Legal

August Update & NEWS

http://keepingitlegal.net.nz/legal-update/aug-2012/

A quick update about the stage and progress of sector-related legislation through the parliamentary process for the current month,  updated monthly.

http://keepingitlegal.net.nz/legal-update/legislation-update-table/

Theme for Mental Health Awareness Week 2012

Take Notice during Mental Health Awareness Week

The Mental Health Foundation of NZ are pleased to announce that the New Zealand theme for this year’s Mental Health Awareness Week (8 – 14 October) is take time, take a breath, take notice.

Free resources are now available to order from the MHF’s  online shop, and this year’s brightly-coloured postcards (which come in packs of eight different colours) have a fun twist. They have a hole cut in them that you can look through to get a fresh perspective on the world around you, without any distractions.

The take notice posters, which come in a set of two colours (blue and brown), encourage you to open all your senses and experience the world around you.

Do you Tweet? This year, you can also tweet via the MHF website the things you stop to notice each day. You can start tweeting now so by the time October arrives you’ll be an expert at taking notice. Who knows, your observations might just go viral!

All the best with planning your activities for Mental Health Awareness Week – you can now submit your listings on the Mental Health Foundation’s What’s On calendar. And don’t forget to take a breath, take time, and take notice!

Disability Law Delivers Open Letter to Minister Collins

In positive news, ADL handed over an open letter to Minister Collins at a National Party public meeting last Friday (August 24th).  The Minister responded to our questions by confirming that she does not intend to close Auckland Disability Law.  She also publicly acknowledged the need for disabled people across New Zealand to be able to have access to specialist legal services.

ADL had a very productive meeting with Minister Turia on Thursday, who is supportive of the need for the services of Auckland Disability Law.

Ongoing support has enabled ADL to demonstrate the clear need for specialist disability services and has kept this on the agenda, and ADL thank everyone for everything they have done to send that message to the Ministry and the Minster so far.

The next step is to meet with the Ministry of Justice to talk about the shape of those future services.  We will keep you updated on those discussions, and will be calling for the Ministry to involve disability community in those discussions.

The latest media on the issue is this interview from One in Five on Sunday night: http://podcast.radionz.co.nz/oif/oif-20120826-1906-one_in_five_for_26_august_2012-048.mp3

Violence against women in NZ focus of UN Committee

Violence against women in New Zealand focus of UN Committee ‘Violence against women was a major concern for the UN Committee reviewing the status of women in New Zealand, when it met yesterday’ says Julie Radford-Poupard, one of the non-government representatives at the United Nations recently.

‘Committee members questioned whether current changes in New Zealand such as legal aid restrictions, the introduction of fees in the Family Court, the restructuring of family violence funding, and a trend towards encouraging the resolution of relationship disputes out of court, may be increasing the barriers for women seeking to leave violent relationships and risking their safety’ says Ms Radford-Poupard.

Link to Voxy Press Release: http://www.voxy.co.nz/national/violence-against-women-nz-focus-un-committee/5/129547

Report Shows Excluded Youth Left Unsupported

Excluded Students are ‘Out of School, Out of Mind’ 

A report released on the 1st of August by YouthLaw Tino Rangatiratanga Taitamariki shows that students are regularly being suspended, excluded, and expelled without proper safeguards and that an Independent Education Review Tribunal is urgently required to provide an inclusive, timely,  and accessible means by which school disciplinary decisions can be challenged.

The report, ‘Out of School, Out of Mind: The Need for an Independent Education Review Tribunal,’ is based upon current research literature and data obtained from the Ministry of Education under the Official Information Act.

Vanushi Walters, Managing Solicitor for YouthLaw,  says that the Ministry needs to do more to ensure that decisions by principals to stand-down or suspend students, or boards of trustees to exclude or expel are correctly decided, both on their facts and the law.

The report found that 39 percent of students excluded from school were out of the formal education system for at least three months, with a further 13 percent being out for more than nine months. Those from lower-socioeconomic regions were most adversely impacted, with students from low-decile schools being nearly five times more likely to be excluded and twice as likely to be expelled as those from high-decile schools.

“Research shows us that students who are excluded from school are less likely to succeed in life than other young people, and are more prone to anti-social behaviour.  We cannot condemn our most vulnerable to a life of failure,” she says.  “Yet despite this, principals and boards are judge, jury and executioner over many of these children’s futures.  Any decision is effectively final, with no accessible right of appeal or challenge.”

The report recommends the creation of an Independent Education Review Tribunal, based upon the Independent Appeal Panel process currently implemented in England.  The Tribunal would provide an affordable, accessible means by which parents and students could challenge school decision-making, and would have the power to reverse unfair decisions.

Both the Report and Summary Document are available on the YouthLaw website.

Send queries to:

 

SAVE DISABILITY LAW Update

An update from Auckland Disability Law

Friday 10 August 2012

A successful hui was held last Monday, 30th July at Western Springs Community Hall.  ADL had around 80 people attend to hear from our esteemed speakers.  Huge thanks to everyone who attended and to Esther for filming and editing the highlights for us.

Some highlights from the hui click below for some video

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=c5t152AQ9s8

See link below for the article Aucklander magazine

http://m.theaucklander.co.nz/news/uncertain-future-for-auckland-disability-law/1488478/

Article on 30 July talking about our public hui

http://nz.news.yahoo.com/a/-/top-stories/14401570/push-to-keep-specialist-disability-law-service-going/

Find out about our campaign in NZSL

Thank you Seeflow.co.nz

https://seeflow.co.nz/service/nzsl_letter/action/present/service_id/1695/

It’s not to late to sign the open letter to Justice Minister Judith Collins

How to sign:

Email your name to info@adl.org.nz and we will add you as an email signatory to our list.  If your organisation has not yet signed, ask them to support us.

Post it to us at Auckland Disability Law, PO Box 43 201, Mangere, Auckland

Fax it back to us on 09 275 4693 or scan it and email to info@adl.org.nz

Finally, you can print it out and post it directly to Minister of Justice, Judith Collins http://www.beehive.govt.nz/minister/judith-collins

If you are signing on behalf of an organisation, please be sure that you have authority to do so.

If you have already written to Justice Minister Judith Collins directly, thank you for the support.  Please let us know if you have done this – we would like to add your name or organisation to the open letter with all the names and logos of our supporters that we will present to the Minister.

What else you can do

You can write your own letter to Minister of Justice Judith Collins http://www.beehive.govt.nz/minister/judith-collins or to the Minister for Disability Issues, Hon Tariana Turia

http://www.beehive.govt.nz/minister/biography/tariana-turia

Lobby your local MP, Councillor or Local Board

You can lobby, write to or talk to your Local MP.  Click link below for list of MPs http://www.parliament.nz/en-NZ/MPP/MPs/MPs/

Click here to find your local board (Auckland Council): http://www.aucklandcouncil.govt.nz/EN/AboutCouncil/representativesbodies/LocalBoards/Pages/Findyourwardandlocalboard.aspx

Let us know how your communications with them were received.

Write to the newspapers, or put out your own press release

Contact us for further information

Follow on Facebook

Search and click the ‘like’ button on the Auckland Disability Law Facebook page

Milestone for the Campaign 

A huge thanks to the more than one hundred individuals and all these groups and organisations that have signed so far (please let us know if you have signed and we have accidentally missed you off the list):

  • 155 Community Law centre, Whangarei
  • Association of Blind Citizens NZ
  • Auckland Action Against Poverty
  • Auckland Branch of the Association of Blind Citizens of New Zealand
  • Auckland Disability Providers network
  • BDBInc
  • Buckingham Law
  • CCS Disability Action
  • Chair, Homeworks Trust
  • Citizen Advocacy Auckland Inc.
  • Citizens Against Privatisation
  • Community Law Canterbury
  • Community Law Centres o Aotearoa
  • Deaf Aotearoa
  • Deaf Christian Community Services –
  • Disabled Persons Assembly Dunedin
  • Disabled Persons Assembly NZ
  • DSAG Disability Strategic Advisory Group – Auckland Council
  • EDGE Employment
  • Elevator Group
  • Employment Dispute Solutions
  • Engage Aotearoa
  • Green Party of New Zealand
  • Grey Power Community
  • Home and Family Counselling
  • IHC
  • Justice Action Group
  • Kaitaia Community House
  • Mana Tangata Turi O Tamaki Makaurau
  • Mangere Community Law Centre
  • National Foundation for the Deaf
  • National Secretary on behalf of New Zealand Public Services Association
  • Niu Ola Trust
  • Parent and Family Resource Centre
  • People First
  • PHAB Pasifika
  • PSA Deaf and Disabled Members Network
  • Pukenga Consultancy
  • Regional Consumer Network
  • Rotorua District Community Law Centre
  • Royal New Zealand Foundation of the Blind
  • SAPOLU LAW
  • Service and Food Workers Union
  • Shine – safer homes in NZ everyday
  • Social Issues Community Team
  • Socialist Aotearoa
  • Southland Community Law Centre
  • Tamaki Ngati Kapo inc
  • Taranaki Community Law
  • Te Roopu Waiora Trust
  • The Asian Network Inc.
  • The Auckland Deaf Christian Fellowship
  • The Wilson Home Trust
  • Unite union
  • Vaka Tautua – Carmel Sepuloni CEO
  • Waitakere Community Law Centre
  • Working Women’s Resource Centre
  • Youthlaw

Engage Aotearoa Reviews Blueprint II

Blueprint II was launched on the 13th of June and the mental-health sector has been largely silent in response. This is likely because Blueprint II is an epic 52-page document.

An Executive Summary on pages 6 and 7 of Blueprint II provides a summary of what goals need to be achieved, but does not outline how to achieve them. This leaves the reader with a lofty set of ideals and little practical perspective of what implementation involves.

In order to get the full picture of Blueprint II, one must read the entire document and it’s 102 page companion document. Notably, the assertions likely to make the most significant impact on service delivery are saved for the final chapter and the appendices of the companion document.

While Blueprint I set out to clearly define what was needed in the mental-health service sector and how to get there, Blueprint II makes calls for better, more effective services while supporting a drive for reduced funding and greater efficiency.

Oddly, the Blueprint II Companion Document makes the assertion that problems of inaccessible and under-resourced services have been resolved and that the future strategy should be focused on efficiency and productivity.

The document provides no evidence to back up this assertion that services have improved and can now focus on efficiency and cost-cutting. Presumably the authors have simply believed the marketing material of mental-health services without establishing whether their rhetoric is realised in action.

Blueprint II is a missed opportunity for the Mental Health Commission to influence government to increase the resources available to the mental-health sector and prevent further cuts to a sector that can ill afford them.

Staff at Engage Aotearoa have been supporting individuals currently residing in Auckland’s acute psychiatric wards across the previous two weeks and can confirm that although the Blueprint II authors state that services are now accessible, family-focused and person centred, this is not the case. Family members are currently left without information, nursing staff do not have time to talk to service-users, service-users are given extended periods of unsupervised leave without a single member of their family being informed, service-users have no access to the clinical psychologist on staff, even when specifically requested. There is clearly no room at the acute service for any form of budget cuts or loss of FTEs.  Anecdotes from service users in the community suggest waiting times for a funded therapist can extend upwards of six months. In our community mental-health centres, only those in the top 3% of severity can be seen. At Engage Aotearoa we have heard stories about suicidal people seeking access to a key worker to keep themselves safe and being turned away.   We have heard stories about service-users being discharged from their community mental-health centre over the phone without being reviewed due to demands on the service. Access to unfunded therapy is limited to those who can afford the fees.

A number of NZ newspapers recently ran a story about an unwell man who murdered his flatmate: while many people were worried about him in the days leading up to the incident, no one knew to call the Crisis Team or police to get him help. Everyone knows where they can buy an iPhone, but no one knows where to go when someone is a risk to themselves or others.

It seems clear that mental-health services in NZ continue to be under-resourced and difficult to access. Some of the most crucial services are so under-resourced that they cannot even make the public aware that they exist, let alone actually provide their service to all who need it.

Despite its push for better, more effective services, Blueprint II advocates reducing the number of services and making those services do more with less. An environment of competition for scarce resources pits services against each other at the same time that they are asked to work together in collaboration.

This is unlikely to result in positive changes for New Zealanders seeking improved wellbeing, the people they live with or the professionals who work to help them.