Charity caring for elderly disabled Australians banned from fundraising by council

Charity caring for elderly disabled Australians banned from fundraising by council
Heartbroken: Locals who utilise YADA services look to eachother for comfort after Liverpool Council's cruel decision.

A small charity in the south-western Sydney suburb of Liverpool has been made to stop fundraising and threatened with a $5 million fine by inspectors from the local council.

After operating in the same location for four decades, the Young Adults Disabled Association (YADA) has been told that it can no longer run its store in a residential area.

The charity’s headquarters in Liverpool also operates as an Op Shop, which is used to raise funds that pay for day trips, crafts and activity days for local seniors living with a disability.

Speaking recently with A Current Affair, spokesperson for the Young Adults Disabled Association, Buffy MacDonald, spoke about the impact that banning fundraising will have on the charity.

“They have stopped us from fundraising and telling us we must close our charity doors if we continue to operate, as we have for the last 40 years,” MacDonald said.

“So, it’s likely we will be forced to close the charity,” MacDonald said.

In another cruel blow, Liverpool Council inspectors have issued the small charity a court attendance notice that includes the threat of a $5 million fine if they fail to comply.

Mayor of Liverpool Council, Ned Manoon spoke candidly with A Current Affair about the situation, revealing that both he and his fellow councillors were appalled by the decision before pointing the finger of blame at backroom bureaucrats who refused to look beyond the rulebook.

“This is madness and us councillors don’t have the power to overrule their decisions,” Manoon said.

The charity’s spokesperson Buffy MacDonald told reporters that she cries when she thinks about what the future will hold for those who utilise their services when the doors of the Young Adults Disabled Association are forced closed.

“We are the only ones who take these people out on weekends and for holidays,” MacDonald said.

The charity has launched a GoFundMe page to help raise funds to fight the council’s decision. Anyone who would like to make a donation can do so by clicking here.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

Soup for the Soul: Canberra’s Soup Kitchen Lady

“Everything in life I share. Just like you are hungry, I can give you something. Love in action. Do something. Take something. Move something.” Stasia Dabrowski makes a mean soup. Every Thursday she prepares nearly 200 kg of vegetables to serve to the hungry on Friday. Last month, Stasia wrote off the soup kitchen van... Read More

Mandated staff ratios, care hours become law in Queensland

  The Queensland government has passed into law minimum care hours and fixed staff ratios for the state’s government-run residential aged care facilities. In the wake of the Earle Haven emergency evacuation of more than 70 aged care residents in July, premier Annastacia Palaszczuk announced fixed staff ratios in state-owned residential aged care facilities and... Read More

Coloured Plates Helping Dementia Patients to Eat

If you couldn’t see your food on the plate, then it would be no wonder that you wouldn’t eat it. Researchers believe that the visual-cognitive deficiencies caused by Alzheimer’s are due to people with the diagnosis not being able to process visual data—such as depth perception and contrast. There have been a number of studies... Read More
Advertisement