Sat. Jul 6th, 2024
Occasional Digest - a story for you

Two years after it was closed “for good”, Peta Kennedy is overjoyed that historic Lady Lawley Cottage in Cottesloe will be reopening to again provide services and respite care for children with complex needs. 

The Red Cross has announced disability service provider Rocky Bay will take over the site’s lease for 20 years on a peppercorn rent from April 2023.

In 2020, the Red Cross closed the cottage, which it had been gifted in 1945, leaving some families with nowhere else to go as they warned the same combination of skilled medical and respite care did not exist elsewhere. 

That proved to be the case for Ms Kennedy and her husband Francis.

Closure left big gap for family

Their son Thallaich has autism, is largely non-verbal, suffers from epilepsy and needs around-the-clock medical care.

A teenage boy sits at a table playing with a plastic toy set.
Thallaich needs around-the-clock care.(ABC News: Hugh Sando)

“He’s been without care since they closed,” Ms Kennedy said. 

“So he’s done a little bit of holiday [care] but that’s only from 9-3.”

Ms Kennedy is a member of Friends of Lady Lawley Cottage and was part of a committee that worked with prospective service providers to let them know what they wanted.

“When we were going through and talking with all the companies, that was the number one thing, it has to be respite,” she said.

“And complex needs; respite services for complex needs.”

Importance of respite

Rocky Bay plans to start offering early intervention and therapy services, including day and holiday respite from April.

Source link

Discover more from Occasional Digest

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading