History of Disability Services in Tasmania

History of Disability Services in Tasmania

 

History

 

Society’s changing attitudes to disability

Abandonment

The abandonment model of response to people with disabilities is basically a model where, if family, friends or someone is unwilling or unable to support a person requiring support in order to continue to live, that person is abandoned. Along with abandonment there were historically, and of course sometimes still are today, more direct means such as infanticide, euthanasia or direct murder employed against people with disabilities.

Infanticide, the deliberate killing of small children was not a statutory crime until the 1920s in England or Australia. Infanticide is a special kind of murder bound up with our notion of motherhood: a father cannot be accused of infanticide. There is an issue here about children in general, especially very small children, who were historically not considered ‘people’ in the real sense. Infanticide is somehow less of a crime than killing a full person, and children with disabilities are of course more likely to be the victims of infanticide. Both in the past and now, intellectual disability, blindness, paralysis or missing limbs would all have been compounding justification for infanticide.

The actual ways that children, including children with disabilities, have been disposed of, are many and varied, depending on the culture and technology of the times. The easiest option has often been to abandon children: in ancient Greece children were left to the mercy of the elements and creatures of the wild. Some people recommended more direct means:

‘Idiots are men in whom devils have established themselves, and all the physicians who heal these infirmities as though they proceeded from natural causes are ignorant blockheads, who know nothing about the power of the demon. …. I myself saw a child of this kind which had no human parents, but had proceeded from the devil…. if anyone touched him, he yelled out like a mad creature, and with a peculiar sort of scream. I said to the prince of Saxony, with whom I was at the time ‘If I had the ordering of things here, I would have that child thrown into the Moldou [a river]. But the prince of Saxony was not of my opinion in the matter’.

Martin Luther

‘Killing a defective infant is not morally equivalent to killing a person. Very often it is not wrong at all’.

Prof. Peter Singer, author of Practical Ethics & Animal Liberation

It is probably sufficient for our purposes to note that the debate about the right to life is still a current one and one where there is no universal agreement. Today we are still faced with decisions about abortion, when to cease life support, about euthanasia and the quality of life, about the cost to society and the wishes and capacity of direct carers, especially parents, to provide support. Decisions in the past as to whether or not to allow people with disabilities to live have usually been made when they are new-born infants, but this has not always been so. In medieval Europe people with intellectual disabilities were dispatched along waterways in so-called ‘ships of fools’, in the hope that all passengers would drown. It was not direct murder, but a form of abandonment. This response was justified on moral, religious, and philosophical grounds, such as:

we are not dealing with people at all;

they are better off dead;

practical reasons: no-one will take responsibility; and

economic reasons: no-one has the capacity to look after these people.

Institutional response

Something quite profound occurred around 700-800 AD. One of the first homes for abandoned children was established in Milan, Italy in AD 787 by the Archbishop Datheus. The most famous early example of a large institutional complex offering services to the old, people with epilepsy, people with intellectual disabilities and the mentally ill was the Hospice of the Sal Petriere in Paris. Founded in the seventeenth century by Louis 14th it was one of the first institutions to have separate areas for those with intellectual disabilities, and the work of French reformers such as Pinel, Itard, Morel, Bourneville and Segan drew attention to the special needs of people with intellectual disabilities.

This response reflects the following changes in attitude:

That people and especially children, including those with disabilities, had a right to live -abandonment or killing of these sections of society that were not able to provide or look after themselves was not justifiable.

If parents or family were not willing or able to provide this care, someone else should.

The responsibility for care was still not perceived to be society’s as such; it was that of religious or charitable institutions or governments.

The charity model was the prevailing one, the exception being in France in the 1700s where the government (or more accurately the monarch) took an active responsibility at this time.

The main features of institutions, some of which still exist include:

the need for physical care -the right to life, shelter and nourishment;

the need to isolate, seclude and restrain people to prevent harm to themselves or others;

beginnings of separating different groups of people

people with intellectual disabilities

people who had mental illness

young, old, sick;

the search for cures, the idea that both mental illness and intellectual disability could be cured by certain treatments or environments, often based on fairly crude scientific notions. The aim was to restore people and make them normal again;

overcrowding -conditions were always basic and harsh.

Educational response

Up to the seventeenth century access to education had been for the privileged or wealthy. Schools were mainly run by established churches.

The philosopher John Locke (1632-1704) and later in the 1700s the Frenchman Rousseau were the leaders of educational reforms which were to have profound and universal effects. Locke’s educational ideas have had far reaching effects on our attitudes to people with intellectual disabilities. The main effect of these ideas and reforms has been to alter educational theory and practice. It has also made education available to many more people.

Locke stressed the fact that people could learn to think: he asserted that our minds at birth are like blank slates and this implied that high intelligence was not the prerogative of the wealthy or the well-bred. If the mind was a blank slate then one person’s blank slate at birth was as good as another’s. Everybody could be educated or trained to some extent, including people with disabilities and the challenge was how best to educate each specific group.

Johann Pestalozzi (1770s) a German-Swiss was one of the first disciples of this new educational theory. He began a farm in 1774 for fifty beggar children, saying that he was trying to psychologise human education. At the core of his ideas was the conviction that sense impressions are the foundation of education. He replaced old ideas with new ones about natural growth, instinct, and natural ability and it is from these ideas that the current so-called developmental model for people with disabilities has been derived.

These ideas took time to flow through to groups of people with physical disabilities let alone to people with intellectual disabilities.

First school for deaf people was opened in Paris in 1760.

The first school for blind people opened, also in France, in 1784.

The first school for crippled children opened in Munich in 1832.

In the nineteenth century the first schools specifically for children with intellectual disabilities began to operate.

At this time we also see the refinement of assessment, for example, who is trainable and who is educable. Primarily this took the form of measuring intelligence (psychometrics), with the IQ test probably being the best known. There was also the beginning of study into the relationship between intelligence and genetic makeup. The use of psychology tests for the assessment of IQ is now less common. Service providers and educators now concentrate on the provision of services so that it should no longer be necessary to label people as having a severe or mild disability (based on intellect or physical functioning) but to assess according to actual supports or services needed.

It has also begun to be realised that services need to be flexible so as to allow people to slip easily either into or out of non-disability-specific services. This notion was pioneered in the USA where the movement of mainstreaming, that is insisting on the right to ordinary or generic services for people with disabilities, is supported in law, as it now is in Australia.

Social response

Normalisation as a concept or an ideology has received enormous world wide acceptance but its chief advocate Wolf Wolfensberger is one who has lingering doubts about it. He says that he has never been satisfied with the principles of normalisation and now prefers the concept of social role valorisation which accentuates the value which society puts upon roles irrespective of any real value of that role.

Social roles may be whatever a society at a time considers to be important.

What is important is social acceptance, and social acceptance depends upon the values of a given society. Both normalisation and social role valorisation are limited in that they seek acceptance in a social context. Normalisation is analogous to the theory of assimilation in regard to migrants: acceptance depending upon their assimilation to the Australian way of life by taking on the characteristics of an Australian whatever that may be.

Social role valorisation is more like multiculturalism. It is a matter of valuing different roles, so people can be different but still be accepted. However, acceptance is argued for purely within the framework of social tolerance, social harmony, social diversity and ultimately social cohesiveness. Multiculturalism like social role valorisation is a good thing because it is ultimately beneficial to society.

Although it is extremely difficult for people with intellectual disabilities to take on valued social roles, that is what we are aiming for at the moment. While problematic social responses may be familiar, increasingly ethical responses are evident.

Ethical response

Richard Wollheim, in an article entitled ‘On Persons and their Lives’ (1980) considers the question of what it is about human beings and their lives that is valuable or ought to be valued. Interestingly, for him, it is not the external life that is of real value (i.e. the ability to perform tasks, formulate ideas or become socially acceptable) but rather it is the internal life which is of value precisely because each one is unique. In a literal and physiological sense your point of view is yours, just as your eyes are yours and mine are mine. Wollheim puts it like this: ‘being myself and not you or any other person, I lead my own life, and I may think of the life I have led as a story with a plot, albeit not yet complete. I may say to myself I have done all these things, and experienced all this, and come out here’.

No account of a person could be complete unless it paid attention to how that person has developed through time. Therefore memories are essential to my account of myself, incorporated in the story of my life. The value of a person under this ethical model lies not in the fact that each person has a unique story (a unique history) and is able to relate it, but rather that each person is a unique story, a series of perceptions held together and remembered. The assumption here is that the internal process remains intact even when the external process is damaged. This is why Henri Bergson for instance, claims that brain damage never results in a loss of memory (because memories are mentally constructed images) but only in a loss of the ability to externalise memories (articulate or act in accordance with those memories). In a sense, the ethical model is an attempt to separate the mental and physical parts of people in a non-religious context, and to say what is valuable about people is the process of becoming, the process is common to all but the content is always unique.

The implications for this response are:

less focus on objective outcomes -more importance placed on everyday interactions;

more individualised services;

greater emphasis on acceptance, increased control by individuals;

a redefinition of outcomes -more emphasis on ‘subjective’ outcomes -happiness, satisfaction;

aim of supports being to develop a happy life rather than a ‘useful’ (in the utilitarian sense) life, because life itself is of value.

 

From History of Service Models, ASSID Conference (January 1996) John Nehrmann

Tasmanian context

The above examination of the history of service provision to people with disabilities is important in understanding why despite current legislation and policy, discrimination towards this group continues to occur.

It was as recently as 1985 that the Tasmanian Education Act was amended to allow children and young people with severe disabilities an entitlement to education.

Prior to this these children either stayed at home, were placed in institutions or attended day training centres if these were available. Since 1986 educational provision has developed to a stage where access to local regular schools is available to students with severe disabilities.

The Department of Education Inclusion of Students with Disabilities in Regular Schools Policy describes the responsibilities of schools in ensuring access and support to students with disabilities. In terms of social change schools play a critical role, and school communities which welcome and value diversity and tolerance by actively implementing supportive school policies and programs will be effective in bringing about further changes in attitudes to disability, and a consequent improvement in opportunities for people with disabilities to belong to and participate in their local communities

http://www.education.tas.gov.au/school/health/inclusive/antidiscrimination/disabilitydiscrimination/history

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Strategic thinking?

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The Derwent Valley Council has been in discussion with the Derwent Valley Community House, Willow Court Conservation Committee and the Department of Health and human services, but not the Friends of Willow Court about the use of Bronte building as a new Community House. While one can’t criticize the good works of the Community houses around Tasmania this raises concerns over the Derwent Valley Council’s ability to communicate, even with it’s own Special Committee of the DVC. It would appear that a healthy conversation is taking place, but not including the very Committee the Derwent Valley Council set up to run the site after its part conservation completion. There are some things that would need to be discussed and finer points and details worked out when sharing Tasmania’s newest Tourist attraction. Has the Council planned for parking for users of the Community House and tourist visitors? What are the shared costs? What is the access to facilities for school groups and what protection is in place for younger students visiting the heritage site? From the outside this looks like another “opportunity” planned decision, and not something that was in the expensive DVC/Malcolm McDonald plan for the heritage site.

Derwent Valley Council
Special Council Meeting Agenda
14 October 2014

5

Discussion
Over the past few years council has been in discussions with Community House and
also the owner of the building in regard to its continued usage, and possible share
arrangements. The owner of the building has and continues to be interested in using
the site for business opportunities but is limited by the current lease conditions.
Council has also had discussions with Community House in regard to a possible
relocation to Carinya, but there were issues in regard to which part of this site as well
as the distance from the township and the community garden.
Basically all negotiations have stalled. The owner of the building, in recent times has
also been discussion options for their current site, but difficulty arose in regard to
expenditure on a site that is not owned by a government entity.
Recently Council has been in discussions with Community House and DHHS in
regard to the use of part of the Bronte building for Community House. There is some
concern in regard to the area that they now have requested, but there may be an
opportunity for some negotiation in regard to shared spaces.
The Department of Health and Human Services have advised by e-mail on the 23rd
September2014 as follows:
“Thank you for arranging for the Mayor Martyn Evans and Councillor Chris Lester
to meet the DHHS project team at Bronte on the 2nd September 2014.
DHHS would like to progress without prejudice formal offer of the Department funds
for the infrastructure and capital works for Bronte to enable tenancy by Derwent
Valley Community House.
DHHS has a limited quantum of funds allocated to Derwent Valley Community House
and has received endorsement to allocate these funds to Bronte in the agreement that
Council offer a long term lease to Dewent Valley Community House (DVCH)
The lease of Bronte is between DVCH and Council. However it is anticipated that
given the substantial capital improvements that DHHS is willing to invest into a
Council property that consideration would be given to the conditions of the lease to
ensure a viable tenancy for DVCH.
I understand the next stage is to gain Council approval to offer the tenancy to DVCH.
Do you require any written or further advice from DHHS to gain endorsement?
I am away for the next three days, and I hope that you may be able to have a
conversation with my colleague regarding the scope of works and timeframes.
The matter was discussed at the last meeting of the Willow Court Conservation
Special Committee and gained this committees support.”

Derwent Valley Council
Special Council Meeting Agenda
14 October 2014
6
The matter was also discussed at a recent Council workshop as some concern was
again raised in regard to the area of the Bronte Building they require.

FULL AGENDA HERE

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Hon. David Llewellyn AM, Conservation Progress Report

David's Notes October 2014

The Annual General Meeting of the Friends of Willow Court Special Committee of the Derwent Valley Council received a report from David Llewellyn which was recorded so everyone can have access to the updated information of the site.

Recorded last Wednesday and broken up into 20 small podcasts for you to hear, with each podcast edited and self titled for easy access to the subject/s that interest you or you can just play all 20 and know the very latest information.

Click on the picture to go to the restoration tab and hear the podcasts.

1. “Work priority considerations” 1:50
2. “ Welcome” 1:05
3. “Total expenditure” 0:49
4. “The project manager” 1:29
5. “Terms of reference and committee make up” 2:28
6. “Security” 1:50
7. “Reason why conservation not complete” 1:23
8. “Questions DVC Strategy for use” 2:37
9. “Preamble” 1:59
10. “MOU” 1:15
11. “Grape vine cuttings” 0:53
12. “David Llewellyn Future” 0:48
13. “Fund raising and financial plan” 2:45
14. “Frustrations and reports” 1:30
15. “Frascati” 1:20
16. “Conclusion” 1:05
17. “Brett Noble on going involvement” 1:13
18. “Anchor tenant and occupancy” 2:27
19. “2012” 1:42
20. “2010” 2:16

 

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Friends of Willow Court Chairwoman’s report.

page 1The Annual General Meeting of the Friends of Willow Court special committee was held last Wednesday night. Guest speaker was David Llewellyn the Chairman of the Willow Court Conservation Special Committee. Mrs Anne Salt gave the committee and visiting members of the pubic a rundown of the years events and issues that the committee had been involved in. While the year has been slower than other years, it is beginning to ramp up as the immanent opening of the heritage precinct opens its doors to the public.

 

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Politicians facing renewed calls for formal apology to Royal Derwent Hospital mental health patients

Yesterday I was contacted by a reporter from the Examiner Newspaper about the renewed push for the apology to the former patients of Royal Derwent Hospital. Tonight on the 7.30 Report, Airlie Ward talked to ex-patient, Dannii Lane who is looking for some type of recognition of the wrongness of the public policy that allowed her to feel more unsafe inside the walls of the institution than outside.

dannii lane“I can still remember the screams, the smell of stale urine, the smell of disinfectant trying to cover the smell of urine,” she said.

“And I remember seeing women chained to the furniture, like dogs. It wasn’t a nice experience.

“I was sexually abused by one of the male attendants.

“You were never safe, you were actually safer outside the asylum than you were in, it was one of the ironies.

 

7.30 Report Tasmania full story The story will be repeated on ABC News 24 Monday 27th October 2014, 3:30am

If you need to talk about any issues this story may have raised please consider calling Life Line on 13 11 14.

 

Video Report Here (right click)

7.30 report apology

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Friends of Willow Court AGM

Neville Rushworth WCThis Wednesday, 22nd October 2014 will be the Annual General Meeting AGM for the Friends of Willow Court Special Committee. Guest Speaker will be the Chair of the Willow Court Conservation Special Committee Mr. David Llewellyn.

The meeting will take place at the Derwent Valley Community House, The Avenue, New Norfolk at 7 pm.

There may also be some issues with parking as the Kettering Incident KTI film crew will be using the old Administration Building next door, but they hope to conclude by the time the meeting is going to get underway.

All members of the public are welcome to attend and people who are interested in joining the Friends of Willow Court are also invited. Nomination forms will be available on the day or by request. A light supper will be provided.

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Two function Centres in Willow Court?

Willow Court is to have two function centres if this is approved, one at the privately owned area of Willow Court and the other was planned for the Heritage Precinct. The Derwent Valley Council has a public plan which includes a public function centre also in its own area just 100 m up the road. This must be a confusing decision for a council to approve a function centre next to their own proposed function centre. It is also believed that the Morgue Hotel idea is also up for approval with the Derwent Valley Council on the privately owned area. new norfolk 026

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Thematic Interpretation Workshop

001Rebecca Tudor talking to Phil Fitzpatrick.

The Friends of Willow Court committee and guests attended a Thematic Interpretation workshop this week to help understand and plan for professional themed tours when the site opens in the coming months. Facilitator Phil Fitzpatrick took us through a process of understanding Thematic Interpritation and offered many examples. It wasn’t long before we started to get down to business with the interpretation overview of Willow Court. The Committee worked in small groups to discuss themes and the planned visitor experience that would align with the theories behind Thematic interpretation. Tourism Tasmania recommend that a full Thematic plan be in place with all tourist experiences and it is considered as best practice. It was also great to have Derwent Valley Council representation there to join us, Councillor Tony Nicholson has an immense personal knowledge and a passion for the Willow Court Site and how it can contribute to the Derwent Valley as a whole. A plan was created in 2006 by the Derwent Valley Council and offers a lot of insight to the contents of what a new plan would contain. Thematic Interpretation Plan 2006

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Phil going through some basic theory.

Thematic interpretation is an approach to heritage interpretation originally advocated by professor William J. Lewis (University of Vermont)[1] and subsequently developed by professor Sam H. Ham (University of Idaho). In the thematic approach, an interpreter relies on a central theme (i.e., a major point or message) to guide development of a communication activity or device. In presenting the activity or device, the thematic interpreter develops the theme in such a way that it will be highly relevant to an audience. According to studies, presenting a strongly relevant theme greatly increases the likelihood an interpreter will succeed in provoking an audience to think about theme-related issues. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thematic_interpretation009

Conservation Committee Member Anne McKinstray learning about “Convincing the Accountant”

About the facilitator:

 Phil Fitzpatrick brings 20 years of tourism industry experience to his work as an interpretative strategy consultant, and brand specialist. Phil is also the Manager of Redlands Estate in the Derwent Valley.

Description
Phil is a highly skilled and extensively trained strategic communicator and thematic interpretation specialist, combining many years of developing, presenting, training and management experience in the industry with solid teaching in the principles of thematic interpretation. His comprehensive understanding of creative methods, combined with clear processes, result in a strong focus on conveying powerful messages and meaning to target audiences. The ultimate long range value is in stregthening the brand of the client and using these methods to inform brand and market planning.

Phil’s many projects include his leading role in interpretation and design for Tasmania’s West Coast Wilderness Railway. He worked closely with staff and stakeholders on the design, development and implementation of signage and the production of an award-winning guidebook for the Railway. This project covered every aspect of the product’s interpretive content, design and delivery and was used as a case study for Tourism Tasmania’s pilot program Building Visitor Experience.

In early 2008, Phil Fitzpatrick and Maura Bedloe of Working Words joined with consultant David Inches of Inspired by Marketing to develop a major heritage interpretation strategy for a region of northern Tasmania. This project covered a wide geographical area and encompassed a diverse community, united by a section of main road stretching between the towns of Hadspen and Westbury. The team engaged deeply in research and community consultation, including an exhaustive interpretive inventory process and series of interpretive workshops involving local community and stakeholders. The project team successfully delivered an interpretive strategy that is unique in the state. No record
currently exists within Tasmania of an entire region adopting a thematic approach for implementation across multiple towns and communities.

Hierophant Projects

Phil has consulted on the following interpretation development in 2009/10

Sarah Island: Interpretive strategy, design, development implementation planning and instalation design
Lifeline Hobart: Brand strategy development and communication strategy
Tourism Tasmania: interpretive strategy for World Heritage nominated convict sites of Tasmania.
TVIN: Brand application, logo identity, creative look and feel
Elmslie Wines Tasmania: Interpretive Elements, brand application, logo identity, creative look and feel
Saffire resort: Interpretive planning, product development, training and content research and development
Bay of Fires: Brand application, logo identity, creative look and feel
The Southern Lights Hotel: Core brand development, brand application, logo identity, creative look and feel
Clarence Valley Council: Communication strategy and brand application (NSW)
Meander Valley Council and Tourism Tas: Interpretive planning for the Northern Heritage Tourism Development Plan
Port Arthur Historic Site: Development of training program and delivery of interpretation training for frontline staff
Tasmanian Devil Conservation Park: Interpretive strategy design, development and implementation planning
Lenna of Hobart (hotel): Interpretive strategy design, development and implementation planning
Gordon River Cruises (Pure Tasmania): Creative, visual interpretation
Puffing Billy Railway (VIC): brand application, interpretive strategy development, implementation planning and training
Flagstaff Maritime Museum (Warrnambool): Interpretation planning and guide training
Navigators Cruise Company: Interpretive strategy design, development, implementation planning and training
West Coast Wilderness Railway: visual interpretation development, implementation and training
Tourism Tasmania: EROT, interpretation training to industry
The Federal Group: Three Capes Project interpretive concept development
Forestry Tasmania: Interpretation review, development, implementation planning and training
Signature Experience Pilot Program, Tourism Tas: Developing interpretive planning, toolkits, training and mentoring process for seven key tourism businesses in Tasmania

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Convict history with Willow Court included.

a-z convicts

Many historic books have been written about Tasmania’s convict past, but few include New Norfolk’s Invalid Station and Insane Asylum and even less are written for both adult and young reader alike. Simon Barnard seems to capture Willow Court’s history in this beautifully 88 page illustrated book. Two pages are dedicated to Willow Court’s history with a rich amount of information. Among a scaled drawing of the Barracks there are a range of well researched topics and include subjects like:

Treatment at New Norfolk,

Population,

Rations,

Riots,

Problem Staff and

Arson.

There also are a number of stories of individuals including Convicts and Staff. The book was published in late September 2014.  The level of detail in the illustrations and research has been praised as extremely accurate. illustration examples

 

About the book:

“Seventy-three thousand convicts were transported to the British penal colony of Van Diemen’s Land in the first half of the nineteenth century. They played a vital role in the building of the settlements, as well as the running of the newly established colony. Simon Barnard’s A–Z of Convicts in Van Diemen’s Land is a rich and compelling account of the lives of the men, women and children who were transported to Tasmania for crimes ranging from stealing bread to poisoning family members. Their sentences, punishments, achievements and suffering make for fascinating reading. And the spectacular illustrations, each one carefully drawn in meticulous detail from contemporary records, bring this extraordinary history to life.”

 

Click here to see the ABC 7.30 Report Interview with Simon  (contains Carlton House yard shot)

Simon Barnard’s Book

About the Author:

Simon Barnard was born and grew up in Launceston. He spent a lot of time in the bush as a boy, which led to an interest in Tasmanian history. He is an illustrator and collector of colonial artifacts. He now lives in Melbourne with his girlfriend and a little dog.

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