Category: Council Services

  • What an amazing year! Former Mayor distributes £45,000 to charities

    What an amazing year! Former Mayor distributes £45,000 to charities

    Former Mayor, Cllr Andy Williams and his wife and former Mayoress, Bev Williams, both had a very busy year in office last year and their final act to mark their year in office was to hand over cheques to their nominated charities 🙂

    They attended almost 500 events during their year and raised over £30,000 and nominated a further £15,000 which saw his chosen charities receive over £45,000.

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    The charities who received the cheques were:

    • Chariotts
    • Dynamic
    • Homestart
    • Salvation Army
    • Stepping Stones
    • Bitesize Youth Theatre
    • Wrexham First Responders
    • Nightingale House Hospice
    • Wales Air Ambulance
    • Blood Bikes – purchase of a blood bike of £14,000 see picture below
    • Wrexham and District Orchestral Society
    • The Katie Piper Foundation

    Garden Village, Andy’s local ward, will also benefit from a defibrillator in the near future.

    “Amazing Year!”

    Andy said: “It was an amazing year! Being the Mayor and holding down a full time job was extremely tiring but it was so rewarding. Bev and I met so many inspirational and committed people over our 12 months that it would be impossible to mention them and to thank them all individually. Wrexham is an incredible town full of amazing people and history and we were both honoured and privileged to be Mayor and Mayoress for the year. I am very grateful to everyone that supported our charities to give us the final sum distributed to local charities of over £45,000. An amazing achievement and a credit to all the people, organisations and groups that supported us. Thank you everyone!”

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  • 20,000 more carers needed

    20,000 more carers needed

    Did you know that in Wales around 20,000 more people are going to be needed by 2030 to work in care? That’s employment for carers that’s flexible, can fit in with family and circumstances and is very rewarding.

    Here in Wrexham we support children, young people and vulnerable adults as well as their families and carers. The support comes from a range of roles to help individuals live as safely and independently as possible.

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    We provide care directly to individuals in a range of settings, from supporting people in their own homes with day to day living tasks, to accompanying individuals to day centres or activity groups, taking them swimming or visiting the cinema, to caring for people with complex health needs in residential homes or supported accommodation.

    Each role in Social Care offers a variety of challenges and rewards and offers training and development opportunities for you if you wish to support people to get the most from their lives and enable them to be part of their communities.

    We work with a number of contracted partners who support the authority by providing social care services to individuals living in Wrexham.

    We work with partners to provide our social care and you can find out if there’s one near you and what’s available on the following link:

    https://www.wrexham.gov.uk/english/links/links_social_care_partnership.htm
    We Care Wales has a fantastic website that has videos, information and advice direct from those working in the care industry right now. It’s worth a look and we’re sure you’ll find something to suit your personal circumstances.

    You can take a look here

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  • Changes on the way to free swimming sessions

    Changes on the way to free swimming sessions

    Do you use some of the free swimming sessions offered at pools in the Wrexham county borough?

    If so, you’ll want to read the following.

    After a recent review of Sports Wales’ Free Swimming Initiative, taking a look at how its services might be better targeted at groups like young people and the over 60s, the Welsh Government has decided to make some changes to what the service offers and how it works.

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    This means there are changes on the way to free swim sessions at pools in the county borough.

    This includes all pools run by Wrexham Council alongside partners Freedom Leisure, and the pool at Plas Madoc Leisure Centre, run by Splash Community Trust.

    The changes come into place from Tuesday, October 1.

    Why are the changes happening?

    An independent review of the Free Swimming Initiative scheme, held by UK Research and Consultancy Services, determined that the scheme was no longer really fit for purpose.

    While it’s got thousands of people swimming since its inception in 2003, the amount of young people benefiting from the scheme has been in significant decline since 2013/14.

    And in terms of people aged 60 or over, the review found that only about six per cent of the targeted demographic currently access the scheme.

    With that in mind, the Welsh Government has decided to make some changes to the scheme, with a reduction in the overall budget and a drop in the amount of sessions available.

    Under the changed objectives, the scheme will focus on young people and people over the age of 60 from areas of deprivation, and making sure people who traditionally might not have accessed the services have the chance to learn a new life skill, and start swimming more frequently.

    How will the scheme affect me?

    The free swimming offer at pools in the county borough will be revised to the following hours:

    Freedom Leisure Pools

    Under 16s

    One session per week, per pool, throughout all 52 weeks of the year at:

    • Chirk – Sunday, 2pm to 3pm
    • Gwyn Evans – Sundays, 10am to 11am
    • Waterworld – Saturdays, 3.30pm to 4.30pm

    Over 60s

    Two hours per week, across 39 weeks (availability will be affected by holiday periods) at:

    • Gwyn Evans – Thursdays, 3pm to 4pm; and Fridays, 5.30pm to 6.30pm.
    • Waterworld – Tuesdays, 9am to 10am; and Fridays, 2pm to 3pm.
    • Chirk – Mondays, 2.30pm to 3.30pm; and Wednesdays, 2.30pm to 3.30pm.

    Splash Community Trust

    Under 16s

    One session per week, throughout all 52 weeks of the year at:

    • Plas Madoc Leisure Centre – Saturdays, 3pm to 4pm

    Overs 60s

    Two hours per week, across 39 weeks (availability will be affected by holiday periods) at:

    • Plas Madoc Leisure Centre – Mondays, 10.30am to 11.30am; and Tuesday, 11am until noon.

    Further updates and details are available on Freedom Leisure’s website, and at the website for Plas Madoc Leisure Centre.

    Additional under-16 splash sessions will be offered during the summer holidays.

    “Will make sure sessions remain accessible”

    Cllr Andrew Atkinson, Lead Member for Youth Services and Anti-Poverty, with responsibility for Leisure, said: “We will work alongside partners to ensure the free swimming sessions remain accessible, and will make sure that users are aware of the new times and offerings as the changes take place.”

    “We will also work alongside Sports Wales to promote the scheme to traditional hard-to-reach groups, to make sure they can benefit from the scheme – in line with the new priorities set out by Welsh Government.”

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  • Are you happy with your polling station?

    Are you happy with your polling station?

    If you have voted in the past, you will know where your polling station is and what it was like.

    Polling places and polling stations are currently being looked at across the County Borough to make sure that they are suitable and accessible, and since you are the ones who are using them, we would like to know what you think.

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    So, if you have any views on your polling places and stations or have suggestions for improvements or different venues, please let us know.  You can visit our ‘Your Voice’ website for the list of current polling places and stations and for more information. 

    You can let us know by writing to Scrutiny Section, Governance and Customer Department, The Guildhall, Wrexham LL11 1AY or e-mailing polling@wrexham.gov.uk by no later than Friday, October 11, 2019.

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  • “They have generated some wonderful memories for people”

    “They have generated some wonderful memories for people”

    These special boxes are making a real difference to residents in care.

    Care homes across Wrexham are enjoying the delights of special sensory boxes and RemPods which are designed to help residents living with dementia make memories more vivid, detailed, emotional and personal.

    The boxes and the Rempods have been distributed to every care home in Wrexham thanks to funding from the Dementia Action Plan, provided by the Welsh Government via the Adult Social Care Commissioning and Contracts team.

    KIDS IN SCHOOL? FIND OUT IF YOU CAN APPLY FOR HELP TOWARDS SCHOOL UNIFORM COSTS AND MORE…

     

    What is a RemPod?

    RemPods are reminiscence pods that help to transform any care space and offer a naturally calming and therapeutic experience which makes it easier for older people in care, especially those with dementia to tap into memories from their past, giving them grounding and comfort.

    What’s a sensory box?

    The sensory boxes provide activities that contribute to the emotional and physical health of people living with dementia. Items included in this magical box include room sprays, which smell like different places e.g. the seaside; animal bingo and jigsaw puzzles; textile boards including different materials to help trigger memories; CDs with sounds and flash cards showing old photographs and painting pictures.

    Sensory boxes and RemPods can help provide a connection between a care-giver and the person living with memory loss, wonderful stories can be recalled, shared, enjoyed and chronicled.

    “It’s been a conversation starter…”

    One Home Care manager stated that both items have made a really positive impact on the way they interact with their residents. “It’s been a conversation starter and we have noticed that some residents that haven’t been as forthcoming in previous activities have enjoyed the sessions and become much more involved.”

    An Activity Co-ordinator, working in one of the care homes in Wrexham said, “I’ve found the sensory box to be really valuable in getting people engaged. We’ve had loads of fun with the painting and puzzles. Families have been so surprised to see their family member painting when they visit it’s encouraged them to join in, turning what would have been a 10-15 minute visit into quality time and staying longer.”

    The RemPods have been great, people have joined in activities and they have generated some wonderful memories for people”

    The initial idea to provide sensory boxes and RemPods to care homes came from the Activity Coordinator Meeting, set up in 2015 in response to the Older People’s Commissioners report ‘A Place to Call Home’ which identified that there was a lack of social stimulation within care homes that can often lead to older people withdrawing, both physically and emotionally, which has a significant impact on their health, wellbeing and quality of life.

    These meetings, held on a quarterly basis, are organised by Wrexham Council and include Activity Co-ordinators from care homes and wards within the hospital and also invites representatives from partner organisations e.g. Alzheimer’s society, Age Cymru, Coleg Cambria, BCUHB and many more to talk about the support that can be provided to care homes.

    These regular meetings have proved to be popular with staff, giving them a place to share best practice and ideas.

    For more information please contact the Commissioning team:

    commissioning@wrexham.gov.uk / 01978 292066

    Need help with school uniform costs? Find out if you’re eligible.

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  • Did you know…?

    Did you know…?

    Do you rent your home from a private landlord or letting agent?

    Did you know that from September 1, 2019 Welsh Government banned private rental fees?

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    If your tenancy agreement started after September 1, 2019 there are certain fees you do not have to pay and if your landlord or letting agent charges you these fees, they are breaking the law and will be fined.

    A landlord or letting agent cannot charge you fees for:

    • checking references or credit checks
    • administration
    • drawing up a tenancy
    • renewing a tenancy
    • amending a tenancy term, for example adding in more conditions
    • requesting or amending a tenancy if one joint tenant leaves and is replaced by another
    • viewing a property
    • drawing up an inventory
    • arranging a guarantor
    • inspecting a property at the end of the tenancy

    The Welsh Government has released a practical guide to help landlords and letting agents understand the ban and what this means for them. Download this guide to letting fees for landlords and letting agents.

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  • Executive Board broadcast from 10am

    Executive Board broadcast from 10am

    Don’t forget if you want to see what’s happening this month at our Executive Board it begins at 10am today and will be broadcast live.

    Agenda items this month are:

    Health and Safety Policy

    6 Renting Homes (Fees etc) (Wales) Act 2019

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    You can read the reports here

    You can watch proceedings by following this link

    https://wrexham.public-i.tv/core/portal/home

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  • Shared Lives – is this for you?

    Shared Lives – is this for you?

    Shared Lives carers are ordinary people from all different walks of life, but like you, they all care about other people – and they’re changing people’s lives in Wales every day.

    Shared Lives is a form of care invented by social care charity PSS, where people who need a little extra help with everyday stuff – like going to the shops, cooking dinner or ironing – go and live with a specially recruited Shared Lives carer, or stay with them for the day, in their family home. There, it’s their job to help the people they support feel more independent, boost their confidence and help them live their lives to the full, giving them as much or as little support as they want or need.

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    You can take a look at PSS’s short video here

    Who uses Shared Lives?

    Shared Lives provides support for people in North Wales aged 18 or over who can’t, when they start using the service, fully support themselves on their own. It could be someone suffering from a mental health problem, like depression. It could be someone who is 18 and just leaving the children’s care system. It could be someone with a learning or physical disability. It could be a new mum who needs a bit of extra support in the early days. The point is, Shared Lives can work for anyone in need of a bit of support.

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    Matching lifestyles

    When you become a PSS Shared Lives carer, the person you’re supporting will come to live with you in your home, and become a bit like an extended part of your family or a close friend.  To make sure you’re going to get on, we provide a matching service. We’ll tell you and the person you will be caring for all about each other and we will make sure your lifestyles match up. The great thing about that is that you will likely be supporting someone who enjoys the same things as you.

    What do you need to become a Shared Lives carer?

    To become a PSS Shared Lives carer, you don’t need any previous experience in a caring role; we can train you up to a really high standard, and we’ll help you every step of the way (you’ll get your own dedicated support team, who will keep in touch and make sure things are going well). It’s about the person you are, as well as the support you can provide. To kick things off, all you need is a big heart, open mind, determination, a genuine nature, oodles of professionalism – oh, and a spare room.

    What are the perks?

    No two days of work will ever be the same – this is more than your average 9-5. But, not only that, you will also be changing someone’s life for the better!

    Here are some other reasons why being a Shared Lives carer is so great:

    • Work from home – or the park, or the cafe or the swimming pool or the bingo hall….
    • Flexible working hours
    • Earn a living by doing something wonderful for someone else
    • Learn new things about yourself
    • Train up in new skills
    • Extend your family
    • Stop someone from being lonely

    A bit about PSS

    PSS is a social enterprise with a mission to help people make the most of their lives. Founded in 1919 by the wonderful Eleanor Rathbone, they provide loads of different services to help people out – from mental health services through to social services. From their Liverpool home, they founded Shared Lives back in the 1970s, and they’ve been doing it ever since. PSS’s job is to recruit, train and support amazing, yet ordinary people like you who have caring in their bones. PSS has a brilliant team based in Conwy who look after Shared Lives across North Wales, including here in Wrexham.

    Contact us!

    So, there you have it. Do something truly amazing with your life and apply to become a Shared Lives carer!

    01745 828000
    Sharon.Dickinson@pss.org.uk

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  • Beginners Family History

    Beginners Family History

    What do Kate Winslet, Danny Dyer, Daniel Radcliffe and Paul Merton have in common?

    They have all discovered their family history via the popular TV show, Who Do You Think You Are?

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    If you would like to follow in their footsteps and find out more about your family history, why not visit Brynteg Library on September 20, 2.15-3.30pm, for a FREE family history lesson.

    The session will look at creating a family archive, the sources that are available online including how to search using Ancestry, and what is available to aid family research at the Archives search room.

    Call 01978 759523 to book your place.

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  • Dementia Friendly Town – how are we doing?

    Dementia Friendly Town – how are we doing?

    Over the last few months a number of local businesses and community groups around the borough of Wrexham have attended a dementia friends session to gain more awareness on what it is like to live with Dementia.

    The sessions have also extended to school teachers, KS5 &KS6 Children and scout groups,  with more sessions arranged in the future.

    A number of our own departments have also undertaken a Dementia friends sessions and this has now been extended to the children’s department too. There are currently 19 Dementia Champions within the authority who are trained to provide Dementia friends sessions for free which only last an hour. If you want to find out more about these sessions get in touch with commissioning@wrexham.gov.uk .

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    There are 850,000 people living with dementia in the UK and this number is expected to rise to 1 million by 2021.

    It is crucial that we plan ahead and look at ways on how we can support this growing number of people and how to continue to raise awareness of what it is like to live with dementia and the impact this may have on carers.

    “Dementia Tour Bus”

    Dementia leaves people feeling confused, isolated, lost, intimidated and vulnerable. To know how this feels, we are very pleased to work with the Dementia Tour Bus team which gives people an opportunity to walk in the world of people living with dementia. We can then be better placed to change the environment and working practices to allow people with dementia to stay at home longer and improve care.

    To date there has been approx. 900+ in Wrexham who have accessed the bus so far and the feedback has been tremendous –

    • I now understand why my mother does the things she does now, I used to shout at her before
    • This training should be mandatory for all to attend
    • This has made me want to go on and do more training
    • This will help me in my role
    • Amazing, mind blowing I can change my nursing practice accordingly
    • Extremely interesting and insightful, this training will stay with me for some time

    The bus remains very popular and at yesterday’s Memory Walk which took place at Erddig it was once again booked up.

    We will update you if the Dementia tour bus returns to Wrexham.

    “In the communities”

    In addition to the Dementia Tour Bus touring the county borough our libraries have also come on board and have hosted several Dementia Awareness training events. These are usually very well attended so watch out for one coming to your local library in the coming months.

    Both Holt and Chirk have been identified as being a dementia friendly community and work is currently underway to work with local businesses within these areas.

    “Small grants available”

    There is also an opportunity to receive a small grant if you are considering setting up a community based activity group that will benefit those living with Dementia. It is called the Community Inclusion Grant and an application form can be requested from the Commissioning Team at any time during the year, however applications will only be considered by the Grant Panel which meets about four times per year.

    E-mail:  commissioning@wrexham.gov.uk

    Telephone: 01978 292066

    “Hats off to Apollo Taxis”

    The latest venture for Dementia Awareness training staff has been into the commercial world as Apollo taxi drivers led the way and took on training. We’re hoping this was the first of many commercial operations who work direct with the public and are more likely to come into contact with those living with Dementia.

    Apollo drivers lead the way with dementia awareness

    If you would like to get in touch to either receive Dementia Awareness training please contact – commissioning@wrexham.gov.uk or you may even be interested in entering the care industry to help care and support those living with Dementia please contact workforcedevelopment@wrexham.gov.uk

    Cllr Joan Lowe, Lead Member for Health and Adult Social Care, said: “We are working hard with other organisations to gradually raise awareness of what it is like living with Dementia. It is very difficult for everyone involved but the more we know the better we can be prepared to help, advise and support. I would like to thank everyone for their huge efforts over the past few months and I know their commitment will continue into the future.”

    Looking back, we have come a long way with raising awareness about Dementia and we hope this work will continue into the future in order to make us all aware of what it is like to live with Dementia.

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