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Caretakers Cottage is an Australian non-profit, government-run non-profit organization based in Sydney that helps children and young people facing homelessness.  Caretakers Cottage is supported by the New South Wales Department of Communities and Justice to provide services for young people across the South-Eastern Sydney region.  Services include short-term, emergency shelter, independent living options, case support and early intervention for youth at risk of homelessness. [1] [2]

[1] The initial formation of this organization began in 1972 with the establishment of a youth center.  The refuge began to host young people from 1975, and Caretakers Cottage was established in 1977 by the Paddington Woollahra Youth Service (PWYS), [1] making it one of the first youth refuges in New  South Wales.  The organization has helped thousands of young people across Sydney, including many from Sydney's Eastern Suburbs, and about a third of the young people it has helped are Aboriginal

Akụkọ ihe mere eme[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

1972: Klọb[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

The roots of Caretakers Cottage begin in 1972 when Laurie Matthews and family founded a center for teenagers called "Klubb."  Just $40 supports the center every week, in partnership with Holdsworth Community Centre, helping to support youth in the eastern suburbs

1975–1977: Ebe obibi na-ezighi ezi na ntọala emechara[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

. In 1975, the Matthews family began welcoming young people informally at the Oxford Street Uniting Church in Paddington, where Laurie Matthews' father, Reverend Rex Matthews, served as minister.  [1] [2] [3] The Matthews family lived in a house owned by the parish and the original asylum was in the caretaker's house in the grounds, hence the current name of the asylum.  The shelter began as a place for youth from the country to stay while they found work and a place to live.  Laurie Matthews first ran the shelter out of her own pocket, and two years later it became one of the first youth shelters in New South Wales to receive funding from the Department of Family and Community Services.  After receiving government funding, the shelter moved to the original Matthews family home.  [4] In 1977, the Trustees began receiving funding from the New South Wales Department of Family Community Services (FaCS).  [5] In these early years, however, most of the funding for Caretakers Cottage came from the parish's Village Centre.  The shelter is run by Laurie and his wife Sara, who work odd jobs that often don't pay.  [6] The organization was incorporated that year under the name Paddington Woollahra Youth Service (PWYS).  By the 1980s, the refuge had changed from a caretaker's house to a retirement home and the Reverend Rex Matthews allowed the building to become a recreational facility, approved by the local council, allowing the elderly to live there in  'themselves, and refuge [3]

Dị ka akwụkwọ akụkọ History of Caretakers dere site n'aka ndị ọrụ ntorobịa Peter Matthews, D. Maler, M. Fulford, & D. Coulter, na 1984, ebe mgbaba ndị ntorobịa Caretakers Cottage dị na Paddington jikọtara ya na onye ọrụ afọ ofufo "òtù ezinụlọ gbasasịrị" na Eastern House., nke dị n'akụkụ ebe mgbaba ahụ. Ndị ezinụlọ ahụ bụ nne na nna abụọ (Reverend Rex Matthews & nwunye ya Gwenneth Matthews), nwanne nwanyị dị afọ 15, nwanne nwoke dị afọ 18 na nwa akwụkwọ mahadum nwanyị na nwoke. [4] : 3 [5] : 65 

Gaa na Surry Hills[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

[6]After 15 years of the organization being based in Paddington, Caretakers Cottage moved to Surry Hills.  [1] The move was an eviction notice from the Uniting Church who owns the Caretakers Cottage youth shelter.  The New South Wales Department of Housing provided funding for the organization to purchase new homes, however, the organization was forced to leave Paddington due to a lack of large family homes for sale in the area.

Ememe Afọ 30[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

 On Tuesday, 23 October 2007, Caretakers Cottage celebrated 30 years since the start of the youth refuge.  In attendance were Mr. Malcolm Turnbull, Member for Wentworth, and Ms. Sylvia Hale of the NSW Greens Party.  [1] : 2889

Name Service Category Description
Caretakers Crisis Refuge Crisis Accommodation Specialist Homelessness Service The Caretakers Crisis Youth Refuge, currently located in Bondi, NSW, provides a range of specialist homelessness services for teenagers and young adults. Services include crisis accommodation, support and after-care services to reduce homelessness and assist with independent transition into adulthood.: 2889 
Options Youth Housing Semi-Independent Accommodation Specialist Homelessness Service Options is a non-profit organisation based in Bondi Junction. Options was founded in 1981 as an independent organisation, providing semi-independent housing for young people. Options fell under the auspices of Yfoundations in 2005: 25  and became a subsidiary of Caretakers Cottage in 2006.[7]: 2889 
Early Intervention Program Other Support Services Specialist Homelessness Service In 2014, following the NSW Government "Going Home Staying Home" reforms, Caretakers Cottage and the Ted Noffs Foundation formed a joint "Early Intervention Program" to help prevent young people from reaching "crisis point."[8][9]
Entity Out of Home Care Crisis Accommodation Out of Home Care In 1998, Caretakers Cottage received funding for their Entity Out of Home Care program, specifically funded for young people in care of the Minister for Family and Community Services. Entity provides emergency accommodation and casework support.[8][7]: 2889 : 69 
Entity Aftercare Other Support Services Out of Home Care The Entity Aftercare program was founded in 2009, geared to assist former residents of Entity.[8][10]: 69 
Horizons Youth Housing Semi-Independent Accommodation Out of Home Care Horizons was founded in 2005 to provide semi-independent housing for young people in State Care.[8]

 

. [11]Housekeeping staff at the Ted Noffs Foundation.  The partnership began as a response to the New South Wales government's "Going Home Staying At Home" initiative, first launched under the Minister for Families and Community Services (FaCS), Pru Goward.  [1] [2] : 14 Caretakers Cottage and Ted Noffs teamed up for a number of homeless youth goals under the Going Home Staying Home reform.  The collaboration allowed for the full implementation of the changes as well as the previous ones.  The partnership has enabled Ted Noffs to provide crisis shelters and complementary services for drug & alcohol and lifestyle problems

Caretakers Cottage bụ onye otu Yfoundations, otu ọgbakọ kachasị elu na enweghị ebe obibi ndị ntorobịa. Caretakers Cottage na ọrụ ndị ntorobịa enweghị ebe obibi iri na asaa nyere aka chọta ntọala YFundations na 1979. A na-akpọ nzukọ a na mbụ Youth Refuge Action Group (YRAG), ma gbanwee aha ya ọtụtụ oge n'ime afọ, gụnyere YRA, YRAA, YAA, na ugbu a, Yfoundations. [12]

Ndị mmadụ[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

Laurie, ya na nwunye ya Sara Matthews, hibere ebe mgbaba ntorobịa nke Caretakers Cottage na 1977. [13] N'oge ahụ, ego maka mgbaba ahụ sitere na Parish's Village Church centre, Otú ọ dị, Laurie na Sara gbagara mgbaba ahụ maka obere ego na ọtụtụ mgbe ọ dịghị akwụ ụgwọ. [14]

Mbipụta[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

Hụkwa[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

  • Enweghị ebe obibi na Australia
  • Ted Noffs Foundation
  • ntọala
  • Ndị ntorobịa enweghị ebe obibi dị mkpa ụbọchị
  • Laurie Matthews

Ntụaka[dezie | dezie ebe o si]

  1. 1.0 1.1 Rapana, Jessica. "Smoking Ceremony for Homeless Program." Wentworth Courier. Fairfax Media. 20 May 2015.
  2. Hassan, Saja and Josephine Rebeiro. "Youths Without Roofs." The Eastsider. February 3, 2015.
  3. Berryman, Nancy. "Reverend Rex Battling On." The Sydney Morning Herald. 2 November 1980. Fairfax Media.
  4. Matthews, P., Maler, D., Fulford, M. & Coulter, D. 1984, A History of Caretakers Cottage, unpublished, Youth Accommodation Association Archives/Caretakers Cottage, Sydney.
  5. Coffey, Michael. Adults Only: A genealogy of the politics of (not)Adult. PhD dissertation. University of Technology, Sydney. April 2014.
  6. Howe, Megan. "Paddington Youth Refuge Faces The Threat Of Eviction." Sydney Morning Herald. Fairfax Media. 10 November 1988.
  7. 7.0 7.1 Kpọpụta njehie: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named hale
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 Kpọpụta njehie: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named story
  9. "Specialist Homelessness Services Going Home Staying Home South Eastern Sydney District." Fact Sheet October 2014. New South Wales Department of Family and Community Services. October 2014.
  10. Kpọpụta njehie: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named acwareport
  11. Matthews, Laurie. "Opening Address." Caretakers Cottage - “Going Home Staying Home” – Launch. Caretakers Cottage. Accessed 27 May 2015.
  12. Coffey, Michael. "What Ever Happened to the (R)evolution?: Take 2 Revisiting Activism and the Early Days of Youth Refuges in NSW." Undercurrent No. 1. (2008): 5-12.
  13. Karp, Paul and Michael Safi "How Sydney's overheated housing market keeps young people on the streets." The Guardian. Saturday 13 February 2016.
  14. Berryman, Nancy. "Couple Run a Refuge for Teenagers." The Sun Herald. 29 July 1979
  15. Seldowitz, Dovi. #HomelessKidsMatter: Youth Refuge Directory. Caretakers Cottage. 2016.
  16. Your Move: Housing Choices for Young People. Caretakers Cottage.

Àtụ:Homelessness in Australia