The Lismore App
The Lismore App
Your local digital newspaper
Flood RebuildMeet Your CandidatesSecond Hand SaturdayAutomotiveHome ImprovementsFarming/AgWeddingsGames/PuzzlesPodcastsBecome a Supporter
The Lismore App

Sunday Profile


SUNDAY PROFILE: Penelope Anderson one of Lismore's nursing treasures
SUNDAY PROFILE: Penelope Anderson one of Lismore's nursing treasures

24 August 2024, 7:01 PM

Like many other Lismore locals, Penelope Anderson wasn't born or educated here. Instead, she moved into the LGA later in life for a change of pace and now proudly calls Lismore home. Maive McKenzie sat down with Penelope to hear about her journey, which includes a passion for nursing and being part of the campaign for nurses to receive a 15% pay rise.I was born in Perth, right on the western edge of Australia. My dad was in the Navy, so for the first few years of my life, we were on the move quite a bit.By the time I was five, we had hopped from city to city, even spending a bit of time in England. Eventually, we settled down, and I started primary school on the North Shore in Sydney. My dad worked in health services there, and my mum joined the field once we moved to Central Coast.(About 3 or 4 years old)After a few years in Sydney, we made another move—this time to the Central Coast, where I went to high school. I’d say I was pretty fortunate growing up; my parents emphasised the importance of education from a young age, and that’s something that really stuck with me. Those early lessons shaped a lot of my outlook on life and set me up well for the road ahead.I’ve got two brothers who are still very much a part of my life. My older brother stayed in Sydney, working for the ABC. My younger brother took a different path and headed up to the Gold Coast, where he’s a school teacher and swimming coach. Even though we’ve all ended up in different places, our roots in those early years keep us connected.(With brothers Richie (left) and Eddie (right))I always enjoyed school—it was a place where I really found my stride. Math and science were my strong suits, and I think a lot of that came from the influence of my parents. Watching them work in the health and healthcare industry definitely had an impact on me. They were great role models, and seeing their dedication to their work made me appreciate the field more than I probably realised at the time.I was also a pretty personable kid, which helped me make friends easily. I think that mix of being good with people and having a strong interest in science is what eventually pointed me toward nursing. It just made sense—a career where I could combine those skills and really make a difference. Looking back, it seems like the path was always there, I just had to follow it.When I was younger, I didn't really have a clear idea of what I wanted to do for a job. Ambition wasn’t something I thought much about back then. I was more focused on the idea of getting out into the world and starting to work. The idea of diving into whatever life had in store for me was exciting enough, and I figured I’d find my way as I went along.(With Nana Alma (grandmother))One of my first jobs was at a milk bar on the beach. It was a bit of a dodgy place—poorly managed, and we weren’t exactly treated well. I remember only getting a couple of bucks an hour, so it’s no surprise I didn’t last more than four weeks there. But when a new shopping centre opened up, I managed to land a job as a checkout operator at Woolworths. That’s when I stumbled upon something that would stick with me for a long time: a passion for unions.At Woolworths, the wages were better, the conditions were fairer, and everything was laid out clearly. The union played a big role in that, making sure the workers were protected. They even offered scholarships to help with education, like buying textbooks, and I was lucky enough to receive one of those. It made a real difference, and I really started to appreciate the power of collective action.I worked at Woolworths every year until university, but in my final year, I decided to leave the supermarket behind and start working at a nursing home to get some experience in the field I was studying. That’s when I got a real wake-up call—I was shocked to see that people working in aged care were paid less than checkout operators. It didn’t sit right with me, so I joined the nursing union. I wanted to be part of the fight to improve conditions, to make sure that people working in such an important field were treated fairly. I also spent nine years in the Army Reserve, where my role was focused on pre-recruitment testing for new recruits. It was an eye-opening experience, to say the least. One thing that really struck me was how many people struggled with basic reading and writing skills. Seeing that firsthand was a real wake-up call for me.It made me realise just how crucial education is, and how many people don’t get the opportunities they deserve. That’s when I decided to get involved with sponsoring kids through The Smith Family, helping underprivileged kids get access to education. It’s become a big passion of mine because I know how important education has been in my own life, and I want to share that with others. Helping people, especially through education, is something that gives me a sense of purpose.Originally, after high school, I decided to study science. But it didn’t take long for me to realise that spending so much time in a lab just wasn’t for me. It felt too isolated, and I knew I needed something different. So, I dropped out, took some time to figure things out, and eventually went back to study nursing instead. That decision felt right—it gave me the balance I was looking for between working with people and using my interest in science in a more hands-on way.One of the key experiences that really shaped me was the first rally I ever attended. It was a protest against the introduction of HECS because, before that, university was free. I didn’t want HECS to become a burden on future generations or create a barrier for people wanting to go to uni. That rally was a turning point for me. It inspired me to get involved in fighting for a common cause, and it sparked a deep passion for social justice. It made me realise how fortunate I was and motivated me to stand up for others who might not have the same opportunities.After finishing my degree, I spent about 15 years working at a hospital in Sydney. Eventually, though, life took a bit of a turn—my husband and I decided to move up to this area and buy a small property in Nimbin for a lifestyle change and enjoyed the change of pace. We enjoyed an amazing ten years on the property before we decided to part ways about two years ago. After that, I moved closer into Lismore, where I’ve settled down since.(The Nimbin property)Being in the Nursing union has been a huge part of my life, and it's something I’m really passionate about. But it’s only in the last couple of years that I’ve stepped into a leadership role. One of the biggest issues we’re facing as nurses is the pay. Nurses in NSW are earning less than those doing the same job in Victoria and Queensland, and as a result, we’ve been seeing a lot of nurses quitting and leaving NSW for better pay in other states.It’s left us in a tough spot—we’re desperate, working overtime and doing more just to keep up with patient demands and make ends meet. The situation has really driven home the importance of our fight for fair wages and better conditions. It’s a struggle, but it’s one I’m determined to keep pushing for, especially now that I’m in a position to make more of an impact.This issue is especially problematic because nursing has one of the largest female workforces, yet we’re still undervalued and underpaid. If the government were truly serious about addressing the gender pay gap, they’d put their money where their mouth is and ensure better wages for a profession dominated by women. It’s frustrating to see the lack of progress when the solution seems so obvious—fair pay for a workforce that’s essential to our healthcare system.We’ve really been feeling the pinch lately, with our wages effectively going backward to what they were in 2008. With limited staff, increasing demand, and low pay, many of us are working 50-60 hours a week just to keep up. It’s exhausting.My current job title is Clinical Nurse Educator - I teach nurses on the ward at the bedside with patients. Mostly newly graduated nurses but also any qualified nurse wanting to learn a new skill. On top of that, I’m picking up overtime shifts. It’s both physically demanding and emotionally draining. Our work is crucial, yet it doesn’t feel valued in any tangible way, and that’s a tough pill to swallow.(My work crew)The biggest challenge I’ve faced at work is the overwhelming demand of the system. With our current heavy workloads, it’s incredibly difficult to provide the level of care we were trained to give. We’re often juggling ten tasks but only have time to tackle six, forcing us to prioritise where we shouldn’t have to.On top of that, management heaps on administrative tasks that might look good on paper for audits and performance indicators but just add to our workload. While I understand the need for audits and such, it sometimes feels like the priority is ticking boxes rather than genuinely caring for our patients. The situation is made even more difficult because patients are getting sicker, and we have less time to provide care, all while feeling undervalued.Even though the government has introduced measures to increase staffing in emergency, there’s been no substantial pay rise. This lack of incentive means that nurses often leave for better pay across the border, where they can find more staff, less need for overtime, and a more manageable workload. It’s a tough situation, and it’s hard to see a way out when the system feels so stacked against us.Outside of work, I’ve got a few interests and hobbies that really keep me going. One of my biggest passions is my garden. I absolutely love spending time out there, growing my own food and getting my hands dirty. It’s incredibly satisfying to see something you’ve nurtured turn into a delicious meal.(A homegrown cauliflower)I’m also really into walking and running. I hit up the Lismore Parkrun every Saturday—it’s such a great little community, and I always look forward to it. Plus, I’ve always enjoyed tackling word games and puzzles in my free time. They’re a fun way to unwind and keep my brain active.Some of the biggest lessons I’ve learned from my career revolve around the idea that everyone has a story, and every person, no matter who they are, deserves help and care. While working in Sydney, I specialised in melanoma, and it really hit home that cancer doesn’t discriminate. Whether you’re old or young, rich or poor, black or white, cancer affects everyone equally. This experience reinforced the importance of providing good care, valuing health, and making the most out of every day.Looking back at my career path so far, I’m most proud of achieving my Master’s degree. It’s been a significant milestone, and I’m really happy with where I am in my job. I truly enjoy what I’m doing. Finishing my Master’s has been a major accomplishment, and it’s been quite a journey. The past 3-4 years have been dominated by studying, and it feels a bit surreal now that it’s finally come to an end. No more assignments hanging over me—just the satisfaction of having completed something I’m passionate about.I don’t have many concrete plans for the future right now. Instead, I’m focusing on enjoying my space and the time I have. I’ve made so many big decisions and achieved a lot, and at this point, I’m happy to just savour life as it is. Sometimes, it’s nice to take a step back and appreciate the moment without always looking ahead.

SUNDAY PROFILE: Grace Cockburn - a lifetime passion for music
SUNDAY PROFILE: Grace Cockburn - a lifetime passion for music

17 August 2024, 7:36 PM

Grace Cockburn knew from a young age that music was her passion. Not many of us make a living out of following our passion, but Grace is living proof it can be done. Grace sat down with Maive McKenzie and told her life story.....so far.I was born in Brisbane but moved to Sydney almost right away. Growing up, music was a huge part of my life, thanks to my mum, who was a piano teacher. Even though she's retired now, her passion for music set the tone for my childhood. Our house was always filled with melodies, not just because of Mum's teaching but also because my older sister played the flute. The constant music in our home was more than just background noise; it was the heartbeat of our daily life and something that truly inspired and shaped me from a young age.From the very beginning, I was surrounded by music. I remember the sound of Mum’s piano and my sister’s flute as if they were part of the family. These early experiences with music didn’t just fill the air; they filled my heart with a love for the art form that has stayed with me ever since. It was a magical way to grow up, and those early influences played a big part in defining who I am today.As a child, I never really thought about doing anything other than music. It was always the path I wanted to follow, and I was incredibly fortunate because my parents were extremely supportive of my passion. Their encouragement meant I could dive into my creative side fully and even earn a decent living doing something I loved. Growing up with such backing allowed me to explore music deeply and made it possible for me to turn that passion into a rewarding career. It wasn’t just a hobby; it was the foundation of my future, and having that kind of support made all the difference.As a child, I dreamed of performing for a living. I performed solo and in choirs from the age of 5 and enjoyed honing my musical skills through performance.My love for music was so strong that there was no question what my path would be. I loved the thrill of being on stage and connecting with an audience through music. That energy and joy of performing were what really made me fall in love with the idea of a career in music.My first jobs were in hospitality, starting at a restaurant that my family frequented every Saturday. When I turned sixteen, I figured, why not ask for a job there? And that’s how I started working at the place I knew so well. I ended up working in hospitality until my mid-twenties, juggling it with my music. I was always a people person and picked things up quickly, which helped me fit right in.Of course, hospitality can be challenging. Customers easily dehumanise you when they're hungry. Those years were a right of passage, though. I learned a lot about interacting with people, handling tough situations, and keeping a smile even when things get hectic.I had always been keen on furthering my music studies but elected to travel first. My partner - at the time - and I lived with my mum, saving up for our adventures until I turned 20. In 2011, while still at Mum’s place, I heard through word-of-mouth about a choir called Isabella a Cappella, led by Dylan Curnow. I joined and ended up going on a musical tour to Japan with them. It was an amazing whirlwind of culture, gigs and travel. Being so young, I felt I didn't have the maturity to take it all in enough.After returning from Japan, my partner and I took our hard-earned dollars and travelled to Europe. After some time living in London, we acquired visas for the Netherlands and settled for two years in the city of Rotterdam. Scoring desk jobs, we worked during the week and spent the weekends travelling to France, Germany, Belgium, Ireland, Greece, and anywhere we could squeeze in!(Arriving in Rotterdam for the first time)Living overseas was a thrilling experience for me. Everything felt so accessible and alive, which made exploring and settling in incredibly exciting. Dropping myself into a new city where I didn’t know anyone was a rush, and having my partner by my side made the adventure even more special. We were truly in it together, and that made the whole experience even richer.The connections I made and experiences I shared while travelling helped shape my world view and I hold them close to my heart.The beginning was tough, bouncing between hostels with no solid income —but getting through that rough start and figuring things out on our own was an empowering experience. It taught us resilience and made the moment we finally settled into an apartment and job even more satisfying.After two and a half years away, I really started to miss home. Holland, with its flat, good-for-bicycle landscapes, made me long for the rolling hills of the Northern Rivers. I returned briefly for my mum’s wedding, which was a beautiful celebration, but it also made me realise how much I was missing out on my loved ones' lives back home. Being away had its highs, but the distance also highlighted how much I missed the familiar comforts and connections of Australia.Returning to Australia, I found myself in a massively transitional phase at the end of my first long-term relationship. I moved to Melbourne and taught singing as well as waitressing. Moving to Melbourne turned out to be a fantastic decision. The city is bursting with life, especially in the art and music scenes. My waitress job was in a 24-hour Italian restaurant, so I met a lot of late-nighters - musicians. Working there not only introduced me to some great people but also allowed me a window into the vibrant world of Melbourne’s music community.I decided it was time to dive into studying music more seriously, so on the advice from a friend, I auditioned for The Jazz Music Institute (JMI) in Brisbane. I was admitted and packed up and moved to Brisbane to study Jazz music. I was pretty apprehensive at first, not having any connections other than family in Brisbane. But I quickly fell in love with the city and the connections I've made here. It's been my home base ever since. I now play in 3 bands, one of them my own original project, teach voice and piano and musically direct choirs. These diverse jobs can all be attributed to the skills and connections I made at JMI.In 2017, Dylan decided to squeeze in one last tour before retiring from directing Isabella A Cappella, and I was lucky enough to join them. It was a small crew—just the four of us—but I was thrilled for the chance to be a part of it and to visit Japan again. It was amazing to return and soak it all in a bit more deeply. Everywhere we went, the people were incredibly accommodating and their passion for music was palpable. I met so many remarkable individuals who made lasting impressions on me. We visited an array of fantastic places—Lismore’s sister city Yamatotakada and also Osaka, Tokyo, Kyoto, Chiba, Fukuoka, and Fukushima. Our schedule was packed; there were even days when we hit two cities in one day!(Learning the koto in Japan)We stayed in various accommodations, but we also had the chance to experience a few homestays, and those were where we met the most incredible people. One morning, two kids hopped into my bed to wake me up, and their parents were utterly mortified, but it was just the sweetest thing! I picked up enough Japanese for basic pleasantries, but there were still some language barriers, especially during those homestays. Even though their English was better than my Japanese, we had to take care to try to communicate. One of the mums, during our stay, would often give me a word-for-word lesson whenever I didn’t quite understand something, which was super helpful and really sweet!After the tour, Dylan asked me to take over as the director, and I jumped at the opportunity to continue their wonderful legacy. I officially started the role in 2018, and it’s been an incredible journey ever since.Outside of work, I enjoy yoga and pilates when I get the time. I also enjoy reading and cooking, but my biggest passion has always been music. Sometimes it’s tricky to separate music from work since it’s both my art form and my income. I try not to let it feel like a business all the time. I genuinely love making music, and recently, I’ve started learning the bass. It’s a helpful way to shift focus away from the business side of things since I usually play the piano and sing professionally. Exploring something new like this has been a great way to keep that creative and playful spark alive.Like so many of my fellow musos, being in the music industry during COVID-19 was a real challenge. At first, we were super ambitious in Isabella A Cappella and tried to keep things going with Zoom rehearsals. We tried multiple setups - separate part rehearsals, everyone on mute, and me leading one-on-one Zoom sessions. We even had everyone film themselves singing an excerpt of one of our arrangements and cut it together into a video. However, coordinating everyone with different internet connections and audio setups was challenging. For about 6 to 8 months, we couldn't meet in person due to restrictions and then the devastating natural disasters that hit the region in 2021. It was a tough period, but we made it work as best we could.(During a live jazz gig)Another blow came when Southern Cross University cut our funding, ending our 37-year relationship with the uni. We found ourselves without a home base and no financial support. But the Northern Rivers Conservatorium came to the rescue, offering us a rehearsal space. This new connection with The Con felt aligned with the choir's history and ethos. The Con’s building, after all, was where Isabella A Cappella first started rehearsing in 1984, as that was the location of SCU's music department. And The Con’s director happens to be a former choir member. Despite the upheaval, we were just thrilled to keep making music and to be together again.Being a musical director has been quite the journey, especially with the pandemic and a string of natural disasters thrown in. It’s been tough navigating through all that chaos, but when we finally got to come back together, it was incredibly rewarding. There’s nothing quite like reuniting with the group, creating harmonies, and feeling that sense of community again. Despite the hardships, those moments of musical unity make it all worth it.There are unique challenges in running a choir. It's a beautiful thing to work with a diverse range of personalities, but, naturally, those personalities will eventually clash. And in the encouragement of expressing through your voice, it's sometimes tricky to ride the balance of everyone feeling heard. But it’s all part of the process of making something truly special together.The main challenge we've had has been navigating the world (or lack thereof) of funding.One of the biggest lessons I’ve learned in my career is how crucial it is to keep the business and planning aspects from overshadowing my passion for music. It’s all too easy to get caught up in the logistics and lose sight of why I started in the first place. To stay grounded, I use meditation to remind myself where my boundaries are and to stop saying yes to everything that comes my way if it doesn't serve me. It’s about finding that balance and making sure my love for music remains at the heart of what I do.Looking back at my career so far, it’s tough to pick just one moment I’m most proud of. There have been so many incredible experiences along the way, and I’m sure there are more to come. When I was younger, I childishly dreamed of being a “pop star”, but the journey I’ve had has been so much more enriching and fulfilling than I could have imagined. Being part of both the Brisbane and Lismore communities has been amazing, and I’m excited for the future and the new connections yet to come.Looking ahead, we’re diving into an exciting project with the choir: recording an album! It’s been seven years since we last recorded, and producing a new body of work has been quite the challenge, but we’re determined to show off the hard work we’ve put in over the past few years. We’re fundraising to make it happen and have created original arrangements of songs by all Australian and New Zealand artists. Including an original song by me called ‘Overflow’, inspired by the devastating Lismore floods. We’re also hoping to take this new record and tour Japan. Building on the strong 40-year legacy Isabella A Cappella has. Even though I don’t live in Lismore full-time, I make the trip down every week. I’ve built such a strong connection with the region and truly feel like I have a second home here.If you want to support Isabella A Capella you can donate here; https://www.gofundme.com/f/help-isabella-a-cappella-go-to-japan.Keep a look out for the album ‘40 Years of Harmony’ coming later this year. 

SUNDAY PROFILE: Darrel Chapman a Lismore sporting icon whose legend lives on
SUNDAY PROFILE: Darrel Chapman a Lismore sporting icon whose legend lives on

04 August 2024, 2:05 AM

Darrel Chapman is not only a Lismore household name but a sporting icon around NSW. His name is synonymous with rugby league, and his accolades are many. However, his work in cardiac rehabilitation was groundbreaking, and he played a key role in shaping the landscape of sports and fitness in Australia. It is not often we publish a posthumous Sunday Profile, but with the Darrel Chapman Fun Run three weeks away, Maive McKenzie wanted to tell his story. She sat down with Barbara Chapman, who generously shared his life.Growing up in Northern NSW, specifically Hannan Vale near Taree, he had the quintessential country upbringing. His dad, a primary school teacher, instilled in him the importance of education from an early age. Tragically, however, he had an older sister who passed away when she was just five, shortly after his birth, although was fortunate enough to get a little sister with who he shared many adventures and built a bond that would last a lifetime.At 15, Darrel went off to Woodlawn, a boarding school that would shape much of his teenage years. It was there, among the old brick buildings and sprawling grounds, that he discovered his love for football. Turns out, he was pretty good at it too, quickly earning a spot on his first team.From an early age, he was a natural sportsman. However, it wasn’t until his time at Woodlawn that this talent really flourished, but he had always wanted to become a teacher much like his dad, so after finishing school, he headed to Armidale, where he pursued a degree in education.University life was a new adventure, filled with late-night study sessions, newfound friendships, and the occasional party. It was a time of growth and learning, not just academically but personally as well. During his time at Kempsey Teachers College, he played rugby union for the NSW country team. This period marked the beginning of his serious engagement with sports. When he ventured into his teaching career at Lower Creek, he didn't leave his love for the game behind. He played both union and league, showcasing his versatility and passion.1958 was a milestone year. Darrel was picked to play for the North Coast, and his exceptional performance earned him a spot on the NSW country team. This opened the doors to an even bigger opportunity – playing for Australia. His debut in the Australian team marked the start of a distinguished playing career. The following year, Darrel was selected for the 1959-60 Kangaroo Tour of Britain, France, and Italy. He played 18 matches and one Test for Australia.In 1960, Darrel joined the South Sydney Rabbitohs and played with them for five seasons. His dedication to the sport and his impressive skills on the field made him a valuable player. He eventually left the game due to a dislocated shoulder but also the need for a new adventure and off the field, life was just as exciting. He met Barbara on a blind date in 1965, and they hit it off immediately. Three years later, they were married, beginning a lifelong journey together.Darrel's career took an academic turn when he started teaching PE and pursued a Bachelor of Arts at UNSW. His interest in sports exercise and physiology grew, leading him to develop new approaches to sports exercise. He worked on creating a more academic role for PE teachers and delved into human movement science, exploring how the human body works and the benefits of sport for children.Furthermore, after his notable playing career, Darrel turned his attention to training and coaching. He started helping train the Parramatta team. His passion for sports and education led him to get involved with several prestigious organisations, including the Australian Sports Medicine Federation, the Australian Coaching Council, the National Heart Foundation, and the Advanced Council Foundation.One of Darrel's significant contributions was as a consultant in the designing and development of an exercise program for NSW's first post-cardiac rehabilitation unit. This groundbreaking unit was established by Dr. David Cody, a longtime friend and former football teammate when they were around 19. His expertise and dedication made a substantial impact in the field of sports medicine and rehabilitation, helping countless individuals recover and thrive after cardiac events. His work in this area was a natural extension of his lifelong commitment to sports, health, and education, further solidifying his legacy as a pioneer in sports science and rehabilitation.Together with Dr. David Cody, they established a clinic dedicated to helping people recover from heart attacks. Their quest for cutting-edge knowledge took them to America, where they studied the latest developments in cardiac care. They focused on the benefits of early exercise and physical testing for heart attack patients, pioneering approaches that would become standard practice.On the personal front, Darrel had two sons, Matthew and Grant.Matthew, born in 1970, found his passion working at Autobarn, where he fits parts and fixes car stereos. It is a job he loves, and he's known for his expertise in the field. Matthew has a son, Charlie, who is now 26 and living in Brisbane. The younger son, Grant, born in 1972, took a different path and became a diving instructor, also based in Brisbane.Both boys were active in sports from a young age, excelling in various disciplines. They won medals in gymnastics and Matthew even played union, though he never ventured into league. Squash, tennis, and gymnastics were a part of their athletic repertoire and a big part of their childhood.In 1980, Darrel took on the role of Deputy Director at the NSW Department of Sport and Recreation. His leadership and vision led to the establishment of the NSW Sports Academy at Narrabeen, which became a renowned Centre of Excellence in Sport. He also developed the NSW Fitness Advisory Council, leaving a lasting impact on the fitness industry and schools across NSW. Darrel’s contributions didn’t stop there. He launched a range of programs aimed at improving community well-being, including initiatives focused on children in sports, fitness for the elderly, and the benefits of physical movement for differently-abled individuals. His work in these areas continues to influence practices and policies today.Additionally, Darrel served on the NSWRL coaching panel and held various positions with NSW, further solidifying his role in shaping the landscape of sports and fitness in Australia. His post-retirement career was marked by a deep commitment to advancing both education and community health, demonstrating his enduring passion for making a positive difference.In addition to his impactful role at the NSW Department of Sport and Recreation, Darrel also engaged with several key organisations, including the Australian Coaching Education Council and the National Rugby League Coaching Scheme. In 1986, Darrel’s career took an exciting turn when he landed a job in Lismore at the College of Advanced Education. He taught human movement science and sports development at this institution, which was initially associated with Armidale University and is now known as Southern Cross University (SCU).In those early days, the university was small, and everyone knew each other. The camaraderie was palpable, with a close-knit community where social gatherings were the norm. It was an amazing time to look back on, filled with enthusiasm and positivity. There was a distinct absence of infighting, and the institution prided itself on its good name and cooperative spirit. Darrel thrived in this environment, contributing to the college's growth and helping steer it towards its transformation into SCU after about three years.At Southern Cross University, Darrel's impact was felt in various roles, from Senior Lecturer and Principal Lecturer to Head of Department and Associate Professor. His dedication to education and sports science was evident throughout his tenure.Tragically, Darrel lost a brief battle with cancer in 1992 at the age of 55. To honour his contributions and passion for sport and coaching, Southern Cross University established the Darrel Chapman Fun Run in 1995 to raise funds for the Cancer Council. The event grew in popularity and, in 2007, was entrusted to the Our Kids charity. Partnering with Lismore City Council, Lords Taverners, and more recently NAB, Our Kids has expanded the event’s reach and impact, continuing to celebrate Darrel's legacy while supporting a noble cause.Darrel's career was marked by active membership and leadership in a variety of esteemed organisations.He was involved with the Australian Sports Medicine Federation, the Australian Coaching Council, and the Australian Rugby League Coaching Panel. His contributions extended to the Australian College of Education and the NSW National Heart Foundation. He also served on the Advisory Council for the Foundation for Children and Youth and held prominent roles such as Chairman of the NSW Fitness Council, Chairman of the Fitness Council Accreditation Sub Committee, and Fellow of the Australian Council of Health, Physical Education, and Recreation. Additionally, he chaired the Multiple Endurance Events Committee, further demonstrating his broad influence across the field of sports and fitness.Darrel’s philosophy on sport and exercise was grounded in the belief that everyone deserves the chance to participate, whether they’re athletes, students, the elderly, or those who are disadvantaged. He was passionate about promoting a healthy lifestyle, social interaction, and the sheer enjoyment of being active. He took this philosophy and applied it broadly, ensuring that his skills and knowledge reached various segments of the community. From physical education in schools to programs for the elderly and initiatives for young people, Darrel championed the idea that sports and exercise should be accessible to all. His work wasn’t just about physical activity; it was about fostering a sense of community and well-being through participation in sports and healthy living.Darrel’s commitment to these values left a lasting impact, reflecting his belief that everyone should have the opportunity to engage in and benefit from an active lifestyle.The Darrel Chapman Fun Run will be held on Sunday, August 25.

SUNDAY PROFILE: Michael Kuhnemann - a life long passion for gyms and fitness
SUNDAY PROFILE: Michael Kuhnemann - a life long passion for gyms and fitness

27 July 2024, 7:39 PM

Michael Kuhnemann is a relative newcomer to Lismore. Seven years ago, he bought the Wyrallah Road Squash Courts and turned them into his first F-Fitness Gym. Michael then purchased the Summit Gym in Goonellabah. He has a passion for gyms and fitness as Maive McKenzie found out when she chatted to Michael.I was born in Toowoomba, Queensland. Toowoomba was a great place to start my journey, but my family didn't stay put for too long. When I was about three or four years old, we packed up and moved to a small spot outside of Tully called Cardstone. Cardstone was one of those blink-and-you'll-miss-it places, but it was paradise for a kid. We lived in Carstone until I hit grade two. Then, it was time for another move, this time to Ayr, just south of Townsville. Ayr was where I really grew up, spending the next 18 years there. It’s where I went through primary and high school.But life in Ayr took an interesting turn when I reached grades 10, 11, and 12. During those years, I attended a boarding school called St. Joseph's College in Nudgee, North Brisbane.Going to Nudgee was a big change for me. Suddenly, I was in a new environment, surrounded by new people, and faced with new challenges. Boarding school life was structured and demanding, but it also opened a world of opportunities. I made some incredible friends and learned a lot, both inside and outside the classroom.The move to Nudgee was a significant chapter in my life. It was a mix of hard work and fun, with plenty of memories made along the way. Even though I was away from Ayr, the experiences and lessons from those boarding school years stayed with me and played a crucial role in shaping who I am.When I was a kid, I was always really into sports. I played Rugby League and Union all the way until I was 33 or 34. Besides rugby, I swam, did athletics, and even dabbled in a bit of golf. My favourite memories are from my time at boarding school, where I really got to shine. I was the swimming champion, the golf champion, and the runner-up in the athletics championship. I even snagged the title of Iron Man Champion.Sports and physical education have always been a big part of my life. From a young age, I loved being active and pushing myself. When I reached grade 10, I developed a serious interest in going to the gym. It quickly became a passion of mine, something that always made me really happy. Working out wasn't just about staying fit; it was about camaraderie and pushing your physical boundaries.Those early years, filled with rugby games, swim meets, and gym sessions, laid the foundation for a lifelong love of fitness and sport. It's been a constant source of joy and satisfaction for me, and some of my best memories are tied to those athletic pursuits.After finishing high school, I went to Kelvin Grove College to study physical education as my major, and I also took up economics. My time at university was not just about hitting the books; I juggled a bunch of different jobs to make ends meet and gain some life experience.I picked fruit in the blazing sun, worked as a kitchen hand scrubbing pots and pans, and even did a stint as a door-to-door salesman selling soft drinks. That job was probably the worst. It involved walking long distances, not to mention the occasional chase by an unfriendly dog! I also did labouring work in various places, which was tough but taught me the value of hard work. And there was a period when I worked in a hotel, managing the door and dealing with all sorts of characters.Balancing school and these jobs was challenging, but it also taught me resilience and the importance of hard work. Each job, no matter how tough, contributed to the person I am today. It was all part of the journey, and looking back, I'm grateful for those experiences.The most challenging part of uni was definitely learning to fend for myself. Turning 18 and moving to Brisbane was a huge adjustment. Suddenly, I was in a big city, far from the familiar comforts of home. I spent the whole three years living in a share house, which came with its own set of difficulties.We had to navigate everything from splitting bills to dealing with each other's quirks. But despite the challenges, I became close with my housemates, and we formed a tight-knit group. We supported each other through thick and thin.Living in Brisbane and managing everything on my own was tough, but it was also a time of great personal growth. I learned to cook, budget, and juggle responsibilities, all while keeping up with my studies. The best part of university, though, was the social life. We had a blast, making the most of our free time with outings, and late-night study sessions that often turned into early-morning chats. It helped that university was free back then, so we could focus on enjoying the experience without the stress of looming debt.We attended classes five days a week, but everything was handwritten. There were no computers or mobile phones when I graduated in 1983, which seems almost unimaginable now. It was a simpler time, but it had its own charm.Those uni years were some of the best of my life. The mix of independence, friendship, and a bustling social life made it a memorable and formative experience. It was a period of discovery, both academically and personally, and I wouldn't trade those days for anything. They taught me resilience, the importance of community, and how to find joy in the little things, lessons that have stayed with me ever since.After uni, I moved out to Logan and taught there for about five years. During that time, I also worked part-time at a gym. The gym felt like a better fit for me, and I found myself drawn more and more to the fitness world. When I was about 27 or 28, my brother and I ended up buying the gym, and that was just the beginning of a new chapter in my life.I had always wanted a job with unlimited potential to earn. No matter how hard you work as a school teacher, you get paid the same, and that just didn't sit well with me. It felt much more fulfilling to work in a job where the harder I worked, the more I earned. It was truly living and dying by the sword.Working with my brother was an adventure. We had our fair share of heated discussions and sibling fights, but it was also a really great experience. We complemented each other well, and together we made the gym a success. I would often start up new gyms and then got my siblings and friends involved once they were up and running. The experience taught me a lot about business, perseverance, and the importance of having a strong support system. Even though working with family came with its own set of challenges, it also strengthened our bonds. To this day, my brothers and I are still very close.I went on to open ten more gyms, mostly in the Logan and Ipswich areas, with one in Cairns and another in Coolangatta. This has basically been my life’s work, and I've loved every minute of it. Working for myself has been incredibly rewarding. Sure, I’ve made lots of mistakes along the way, but I’ve learned a ton too. With my educational background and a bit of luck, it has turned out to be an amazing career.I found my niche by taking over squash centres or indoor sports centres. These places already had showers, toilets, and large areas that I could remodel and deck out with the newest equipment. Each new gym brought its own set of challenges and triumphs. I learned the ropes of business management, customer service, and marketing, often the hard way. But those lessons were invaluable. They helped me grow not just as a business owner but as a person.Opening these gyms allowed me to combine my passion for fitness with my entrepreneurial spirit. I’ve always enjoyed seeing people transform their lives through fitness, and having the chance to facilitate that on a larger scale has been incredibly fulfilling. Plus, running my own business gave me the freedom to innovate and make decisions that I believe in, something that’s hard to come by in a traditional job.I met my wife, Katie, in Brisbane in 2018, thanks to dating apps. It was a bit of a slow start—she didn't show up for our first two dates. I was starting to think it wasn't meant to be, so on the third date, I sent her a message saying that if she wasn’t interested, she didn’t have to come and I’d just move on. But to my surprise, she showed up, and that was the start of something wonderful.From that day on, Katie hasn’t left my side. We quickly realised we had a lot in common. We were both passionate about going to the gym, which was a great shared interest. Nice wine and fun nights out on the town were high on our list too, and we loved exploring new places and making the most of our time together.Our relationship took off from there, and all those shared interests helped us build a strong connection. Katie and I have had many great adventures together, and our time enjoying each other's company has been one of the highlights of my life.I have four daughters, and each of them has carved out their own unique path in life. My eldest is now a mother of four, living in Redcliffe, Brisbane. It’s been amazing to watch her grow into such a wonderful parent.Another one of my daughters initially went to QUT to study law, but she discovered a different and exciting passion along the way. She’s now a tattoo artist, which was a surprising but fantastic turn of events.The other two are still finishing up their degrees. One is set on becoming a pharmacist, and the other is aiming to become a psychologist. They’ve both worked incredibly hard and are making great strides toward their goals.Watching all four of them find their own ways and pursue their passions has been one of the greatest joys of my life. Each of them brings something special to the table, and I'm incredibly proud of the women they’ve become.I was looking to get away from Brisbane but didn't want to stray too far, and that’s when I discovered Lismore. It turned out to be the perfect place to start a new venture. It’s ideally situated—not too far from the bustling city life of Brisbane or the relaxing beaches along the coast. Lismore offers a wonderful balance of having our own space while still being connected to the wider world.Having our own place here, just Katie and me, has been incredibly rewarding. It’s a great feeling to have a peaceful retreat where we can enjoy our own little corner of the world. The change of pace from the city has been refreshing.Even though we’re no longer based in Brisbane, it’s still easy to visit family there. The drive is manageable, so we can keep in touch and spend time with loved ones without it feeling like a huge trek. It’s nice to have that flexibility, being able to enjoy our life here while staying connected to our roots.And here’s a bit of family trivia: all of my siblings—three brothers and a sister—work in the fitness industry as well. It’s amusing how we all ended up in the same field, despite each of us taking our own unique paths to get there. It feels like the fitness world really does run in the family!(Michael with his brothers at his wedding to Katie)By 2017, I decided to buy a gym on Wyrallah Road here in East Lismore. I went through a major renovation and reopened it in 2018. It was a big project, but seeing it come to life was incredibly satisfying.Then, when COVID hit, things took a turn for the worse. The pandemic was absolutely horrific. With restrictions in place, some of my gyms up in Brisbane were inaccessible, and I had to rely on others to manage them. I was really grateful for their support during that challenging time. Technology became a lifesaver, helping me stay connected and manage operations remotely.Despite the hurdles, I eventually decided to sell my gyms in Brisbane. It was a tough decision, but it was the right one, given the circumstances. The whole experience taught me a lot about resilience and adaptability in the face of unforeseen challenges. In 2022, I was in the midst of negotiations to buy the Summit Gym and Aquatic Centre when disaster struck. The biggest flood in over 500 years caused severe damage to the Wyrallah Road gym, which had only recently been renovated. The flood was devastating—everything inside was ruined by water damage.It was an overwhelming situation, and it took me about three months to strip out the damaged equipment and renovate the space again. The process was painstaking, but I was determined to get things back on track. From the flood in February to reopening by May, it was a whirlwind of hard work and persistence.The takeaway from all this experience is to always be prepared for the unexpected. Running a gym is a straightforward model, but it comes with its own set of challenges. Even though it took a lot of effort and money to clean up after the flood and replace the equipment, it’s crucial to ensure that everything is running smoothly.At the core of it all, it's about keeping things simple and efficient. Making sure that all the tools and equipment are clean and functioning properly is essential to providing a good experience for everyone who walks through the door. While setbacks like floods can be incredibly disruptive, staying focused on the basics and being ready to tackle issues head-on helps keep things on track and ensures that the business can keep moving forward.Working here in Lismore has been a great experience. Lismore really serves as the hub for the Northern Rivers region, and it's where all the big stuff happens. The area feeds out to nearby places like Casino, Kyogle, and Alstonville, but Lismore is the central point for everything major.Our downtown location covers the CBD and its surrounding areas, while our other gym location in Goonellabah complements it perfectly. Memberships at either location give you access to both gyms, so our members can enjoy the full range of facilities no matter which site they visit.Running a gym is incredibly rewarding. It’s a place where people come to improve themselves, whether they want to get stronger, fitter, or recover from an injury. It’s not just about physical fitness; it’s also about creating a space where people can find happiness and connect with others who share similar goals.One of the best parts of this job is that we’re not dealing with the kind of crowd you'd find in a pub or a bar. Here, everyone is focused on being fit and healthy, which means everyone is on the same page. It creates a non-judgmental environment where people feel comfortable and supported. You don’t need any special experience or a fancy uniform to get started—just bring some shoes, comfortable clothes, and a towel. Running a gym definitely comes with its challenges. Keeping all the equipment in top shape has been a big task, especially with COVID-19 making it difficult to get parts and maintain everything properly. Ensuring that everything stays clean, tidy, and fully functioning requires constant attention.Fortunately, I have a fantastic team of staff and we also work closely with allied health professionals, including exercise physiologists, personal trainers, and others, to support our members. We have a diverse range of clients, including those with disabilities and NDIS participants, and it's rewarding to be able to supply and assist them with their fitness needs.Managing a gym with over 4,500 members means keeping everything running smoothly and ensuring everyone follows the rules. It’s a balancing act, but it’s worth it. The shared goal of improving health and fitness brings a sense of community and cooperation, which makes the effort worthwhile. Despite the hurdles, seeing everyone work toward their goals and being generally happy with their progress is incredibly fulfilling.(Katie and Micael at the front desk of F-Fitness Goonellabah)Looking to the future, we’re always focused on upgrading and introducing new things. Since the renovation of the Wyrallah gym in 2018, we’ve been continuously working to improve. As of 2022, we’re aiming to expand to nearby areas, but for now, we’re concentrating on fine-tuning everything here. The gym is almost at full capacity, and we’re excited for the new equipment that’s set to arrive by the end of the year.Our goal is to stay in Lismore and continue providing top-notch facilities and services. Owning and operating these gyms means I’m here seven days a week, early and late, but I’m so grateful for being able to do what I love as a career alongside my incredible wife, Katie.I love being around Lismore and the Northern Rivers, and one of my favourite parts is exploring all the local coffee shops and attending events like the Lantern Parade and surrounding markets and will continue my journey within this lovely region. 

SUNDAY PROFILE: Tony Zammit - one of Lismore's true entrepreneurs
SUNDAY PROFILE: Tony Zammit - one of Lismore's true entrepreneurs

20 July 2024, 7:18 PM

Tony Zammit is the definition of an entrepreneur. He started his first business at the age of six and is still thinking up business opportunities at the age of fifty-six. Massive McKenzie sat down with Tony to learn more about his life journey so far.I was born in Sydney in 1968, but we didn't stick around long. My whole family packed up and moved to Melbourne when I was just a kid, and that's where I grew up. School wasn’t really my thing, but my parents had this rule: no leaving school until you had a job. So, I had to stick it out. But I was always the entrepreneurial type, even from a young age. My first business venture kicked off when I was just 12.It all started one day when we went to buy a pigeon. I remember standing there, looking around, and seeing pigeons everywhere. My brain immediately started thinking in dollar signs. $6 per pigeon? That seemed like easy money to me. So, I got myself a tarp, climbed into the railyard, and started catching pigeons. I’d shove them into a potato sack and sell them to the Maltese folks for $6 each. It was a pretty sweet gig for a 12-year-old.But, as with most childhood schemes, my pigeon empire didn’t last forever. One day, I went to collect the pigeons I kept in our stable, and I found the horses had kicked a hole in the wall. Every single pigeon had flown the coop. That was the end of my pigeon-catching days, and I thought, "Stuff the pigeons!" From pigeons to bigger and better things, I always had a knack for seeing potential, and, honestly, that’s been the story of my life: always on the lookout for the next big idea, ready to jump in and give it a go.After my pigeon-catching days ended, I started looking for new job opportunities. I quickly realised there was money to be made in selling seconds from the dim sim factory. I’d go door-to-door, peddling frozen dim sims, yum cha, and even chiko rolls. By the age of 15, I had eight big deep freezers and my own little warehouse in my parent's garage, where I stored the products before heading out to sell them. At the time, my older brother had a knack for getting into trouble with the law. My dad, always trying to help, got him a job driving the truck. When I was sixteen, my dad had to go and get my brother out of jail. Left on my own, I decided to take my dad’s car for a spin. Unfortunately, I ended up wrecking it. Desperate to fix it before my dad got back, I took my brother’s truck to hunt for parts.Driving that truck was a revelation. I found that I really enjoyed it. That same week, I landed a job working with the truck, and I couldn’t have been happier. But things took a turn when my dad came home while I was out at work. Seeing the truck gone, he thought it had been stolen and called the cops. I came home to a scene: police cars everywhere and my dad in a panic. When he told me my brother’s truck was stolen, I had to confess it was parked out front. Dad was furious and confused. He marched outside, saw the truck, and realised I had taken it. He was mad, especially because it was my brother’s truck. I told him, ‘Dad, you’re going to have to get him another truck because now you've got two trucker sons.’ By the time I hit 21, I was running my own trucking business with five trucks to my name. It sounds impressive, but being so young, I wasn’t the best with money. Many of those trucks were on the brink of being repossessed. When a couple of them needed new motors at the same time, I just couldn’t afford it. So, I made the tough decision to close the business, sell everything off, pay my debts, and drive a truck for someone else instead.At 21, I married my first wife, and we got married when I was 22. Life seemed pretty good, and eventually, we had four kids. Everything was going well, so we decided to move up to the Gold Coast and start fresh after two years of marriage. I started another transport business up there, and things were looking up. But we didn’t work well together anymore and ended up breaking up. It got messy although it didn't need to be, but we managed to sort things out.During our split, she fell pregnant with our fourth child. Although the baby wasn’t biologically mine, we made a pact. I moved back in to help her out as moral support, and we financially supported each other. It wasn’t the most conventional arrangement, but it worked for us. On September 12, 1994, one crazy night, my wife woke me up at 2 am and told me the baby was coming. I wanted to get us to the hospital and asked if she could make it to the car, but she said no way. So, we headed to the bathroom. I grabbed all the towels and sheets that I could find, and since she’d already had three kids, I said, “Well you know what to do”. It turned into a successful home birth right there, and I was the one waiting to catch our little guy.From the moment I held him, I bonded with this little boy. It didn’t matter to me who the biological father was; he needed someone to care for him, and that someone was me. I raised him just like my other three and even got his name tattooed on my arm with my other kids.After that, I bounced from job to job, working in cafes and restaurants. Eventually, I partnered with an old mate who taught me how to make pizza. We ran Robertones Pizza on the Gold Coast. I loved it so much that I ended up taking over the business from him. Making pizzas was a blast, and before long, cooking was in my blood. I eventually owned 14 pizzerias, cafes, fish & chip shops and restaurants in my lifetime.A few years later, I married Lee, my current and amazing wife, and we’ve been happily together for 20 years and married for over ten years. During this time, I took a job with a tile company as a warehouse supervisor. It was tough work, but I didn't shy away from a challenge. Then came an even bigger challenge: a $400,000 contract to tile a four-story apartment block. The catch? I couldn’t tile to save my life. But I wasn’t about to pass up that kind of money. So, I hired some skilled tilers, and miraculously, we got the job done.After that adventure, Lee and I decided to move out to Western Queensland, to a little place called Tara, about four hours west of Brisbane. We started a shed building and handyman business out there. Life in the countryside was something else. We had horses, cows—you name it, we had it. When it flooded, we’d see fish swimming down the street from the dam, and once the water receded, we’d find fish and yabbies flapping on the road. I loved working out on feedlots, especially with the cows. They always had this goofy look on their faces and would follow you around, curious about what you were doing. I was working at a feedlot in Condamine when we got hit by the 2009 Condamine flood. I had gone home for Christmas and got stuck there, unable to get back to work for two weeks. When I finally made it back, it flooded again, and this time, I was trapped on the property for two weeks.There were three other guys with me, and together, we had to feed 30,000 head of cattle because no one else could get to us. The cows needed to eat, but we didn’t get any recognition for our efforts. In fact, we even got in trouble for sleeping on the premises.During this job, I had a bad fall from a tractor that wasn’t properly maintained and injured my knee and shoulder. With those injuries, I couldn’t build sheds for a while. So, I switched gears and started driving a taxi in Dalby, Queensland.When I was driving a taxi, we had a massive kangaroo problem. You’d hit them constantly. I hit kangaroos almost every day and, even coming through the windshield so often that my little Charade looked like a dinosaur had chewed it up. On the way home, I'd hit a kangaroo, get home for some sleep, when I wake up, pull the panels off the car, jump on them to get them back in shape, put them back on, and go again. There was no point in getting new panels because it was so bad. In about two years, I had to replace around 20 windshields. It's sad because kangaroos are beautiful creatures, but it was a real problem.My wife was studying at SCU, so we eventually moved out here for her studies. Lee grew up in Kyogle, so I got a job at Woolworths in Casino as a manager. It wasn’t for me, so I quit and decided to study law at SCU. I thought about doing IT as well, but I didn’t enjoy it, and the programs weren’t what I wanted to do. So, I stuck with the law, and now I only have eight units left.While studying at SCU, I was juggling a lot. I was taking four units there and another four units of graduate certificate and masters courses in intellectual property law at UTS. Afterwards when my studies were completed, I also started up The Sassy Bean, a café that would give me an income while I get my trademark, copyright and patent business off the ground. My plan was to eventually sell the café and fully dive into the intellectual property world.I built The Sassy Bean when I had almost nothing to work with. I remember waiting three hours for my wife just to get four balls of wool from Spotlight, and during that time, I thought it’d be a great spot for a café. My wife, Lee, said 'no' about four times before I finally got her around to it. A month later, we sort of forgot about it, but I brought up the café idea again. I crunched some numbers and asked if we could sign off on it. She said yes, as long as it would make money. And that’s how The Sassy Bean came to be—it’s been an amazing journey, full of surprises, both good and bad.I knew the intellectual property business couldn't just be an online thing; I needed to meet business owners face-to-face. So, I signed up for five Expos in Queensland to make those business contacts. But then Covid hit, and all the expos got cancelled. It was tough trying to keep The Sassy Bean afloat during the pandemic. To make ends meet, I took over in the kitchen at the Kyogle Golf Club, serving pizza and pasta out the back doors on Thursdays. It was an instant success, and it kept us going until we could reopen The Sassy Bean.When things finally started to look up, we re-opened the café in Lismore seven days a week and did the bistro at Kyogle three nights a week. Business was booming, and I started focusing more on my copyright, patenting, and trademark business. Eventually, just before the 2022 flood hit, we stopped doing the bistro to concentrate on The Sassy Bean as it was going really well. I resubmitted my interest for the expos in Queensland and got everything ready. But just as we were getting back on track, we got hit by the flood.I originally put the café out here because I thought it would not flood, nor would it ever. The night before the big flood, I asked my wife if we should move everything. She asked, "Should we?" But I figured there was no way it would flood here, so I left everything and didn't even bring the boat home.That morning, I didn’t set my alarm because I assumed I wouldn’t be able to get back into Lismore due to the flood, but I was sure the flood wouldn’t hit the café. Then, at 8 am, my wife woke me up and told me that HomeCo and Bunnings were underwater.At first, I didn’t believe her, but when I realised she was right, she asked if I wanted tea. I said yes, and she started making tea. By the time the tea was ready, I was already on the phone and within 20 minutes, I had bought a food van, generator and a shipping container for anything we may be able to save. I was in rebuild mode, sipping my tea while watching the news. I even saw my mate Mark live on TV, getting rescued by an armed forces helicopter. I was relieved he was getting to safety.It was a shocking turn of events. I had been so confident that the flood wouldn’t reach us, but there we were, dealing with the aftermath. The flood was a huge setback, but it also reminded me of the importance of resilience and quick thinking. When the flood hit, I went into town to fill up on fuel and do a big shop, assuming people would come and stay with us. Once I got home, I quickly bought a generator and started getting the food van ready to operate as soon as we could get back into town.As soon as we were able, I drove back to the café and called the shopping centre to come in and clean out the rotten food and start the cleanup. While my construction stayed put, the equipment was scattered and smashed everywhere. I spent time cleaning up the café and helping out with the shopping centre cleanup.The kids I had working with me were dealing with different levels of anxiety, so we introduced Ugene, the therapy ducks and his girlfriend, Beatrice. These were fluffy plush toys that the kids could use to comfort themselves. Whenever they were upset, they’d grab a fluffy duck, head to the storeroom, and come back out when they felt okay. The first thing I did was find the ducks, wash them, and take photos of them all cleaned up. I sent the photos to my team with a message saying that if the ducks were okay, we’d be okay too.I stayed in close contact with my team, checking in often to make sure they were alright. Unfortunately, most of them couldn’t return because the flood had set them back. Despite the challenges, we kept pushing forward, finding comfort in small things and supporting each other through the tough times.When the flood hit, the ground was so waterlogged that we couldn’t get the food van off the property. So, I decided to buy a container kitchen from Sydney. Once the army left the parking lot in front of The Sassy Bean and was cleared, we set up the container kitchen right outside. The generator was up and running, and business started booming, which meant I needed a second kitchen. I got another one to keep up with the demand.We also started doing free barbecues every fortnight at the recovery centre at the showground. I’d never experienced a flood like this before, and I knew there were people who were in a much worse situation than us. I wanted to do everything I could to help out.At one point, we had nine staff crammed into a tiny space that felt like a dog kennel. With other businesses reopening, it became even more challenging, especially with the $ 300-a-day fuel cost for the generator. We had to make a decision: relocate or close until the shopping centre was ready. We chose to relocate, and in just 24 hours, we had electricians, plumbers, Essential Energy and council on site, working around the clock to get everything set up and we relocated to where the 7/11 is now.It was a tough time. The rain kept pouring down, and even though we had set up a gazebo to keep us dry, it was only up for about a week before the rain destroyed it. The old takeaway place in Habib Drive, across the road from The Sassy Bean, was gutted by the flood, so I decided to rent it and reopen it. We started serving fish and chips, hamburgers, and take-home meals. It took us eight days to get the place operational from scratch, and we were so relieved to be out of the rain and sun, finally having a home and shelter from all the elements.We were in the new takeaway spot for about three months. Then, we got an email from the shopping centre saying we could come back in two weeks to set up, but it had to be done within seven weeks. With no money left after buying the other shop, I sold that site and one of our cars to fund the rebuild. My son and I took on the task of constructing the walls and setting everything up ourselves. We managed to get it done within those seven weeks. The walls might not be perfectly straight, but unless I point it out, you’d never know.The last 18 months were a struggle, but the past few months have been much better for business. I deeply appreciate my wife, staff, and customers for their support. Without them, I don’t think we could have survived those tough 18 months, especially since many businesses couldn’t bounce back after the flood. We cater to a diverse group of people, including gluten-free, vegetarians, vegans, and those with religious dietary restrictions. We offer halal meat, vegetarian, vegan, and gluten-free options, and our varied menu is a big part of what keeps us going.My wife, Lee, is a remarkable woman. If it weren’t for her support and the freedom she gives me to be who I am, I wouldn’t be here today. She’s the reason I can do what I love, and I’m incredibly grateful for her support, love and her hand in mine as we walk through life together.Here at The Sassy Bean, people come for the good food, good coffee, and bad jokes. Some folks just need a place to relax and enjoy themselves. And while I’m busy with all that, I’ve got some new plans on the horizon.While studying for a law exam, I dozed off in front of the TV and heard about companies like Coffee Club and Starbucks planning to stop using straws by 2020. That sparked an idea for a new kind of popper. I started sketching out my design, and after a nap and an exam, I went to Norco to get a card to make the poppers. The prototype worked well, so I registered the design, and we’re still in touch about it.I’ve been working on my passion for law and intellectual property. Although it hasn’t made me rich, it’s something I’ve always been interested in. My inventions might just change that—it could make me disgustingly rich if it takes off. My design for a popper went from Melbourne to New Zealand, Japan, the UK, and even Zurich. I had the chance to present it at the headquarters of the guys who invented the Sunny Boy. It was a slow process, but I redesigned the equipment to speed things up.I’ve been through billions of poppers, with a process that’s been slower than I’d like. But I’m determined to speed it up and bring my imagination to life. My overall goal is to help others turn their ideas into reality and protect their businesses from bad reputations. It’s all about bringing those creative ideas to life and making sure they’re protected and respected.Lee has been incredibly supportive, no matter how 'out-there' my ideas are. When I told her I wanted to study law, she asked why. I said it was because I was good at it. So, I started studying law at SCU and then at UTS, focusing on trademark and copyright.I took on four units and was really hitting my stride when they told me I couldn’t sit for the exams because I hadn’t completed my bachelor’s degree. I threatened to sue UTS for breach of contract, arguing that was not a prerequisite. We went back and forth, and I threatened a $1 million lawsuit. They eventually backed off and told me good luck with the exams.I work seven days a week here at Sassy Bean, and whenever I get a bit of time, I’m working on completing my degrees. It’s a busy life, but I wouldn’t have it any other way.Lee and I have had quite the ride together. When she decided she wanted a motorcycle licence, she got a bit scared doing it alone so I got my licence too, and we ended up swapping one of our cars for a Harley, which I had given her, telling her when I came to get a blood test at the pathology unit she works at, just before she was about to give me the needle. It was a big change but a thrilling one. I ended up with an old bike, and my licence expired. Lee was nervous about riding alone, so we redid our licences and swapped a car for another motorcycle. My latest bike, a Calsavy Volkan, had pedals that were too far forward, so I had to order parts to fix it up. I’ll get to that this weekend and go for a ride with Lee once she’s healed from her tattoos.We’re setting up for our old age, planning to tow the bikes to whatever hotel we stay at and enjoy beautiful weather on the road. After I finish my degree, my plan is to travel to country towns and offer my legal services. It’s a way to ensure I have money for retirement and fuel for the bike.Selling the café is a tough decision. I’ll miss it dearly, but I need to get healthier and finish my degree. I’m setting up my business in Lismore, but I’ll be travelling to Brisbane and the Gold Coast for the expos to drum up some business so I can stay in Lismore as my base. Lismore has become home, and I love this place with my whole heart. I was a city boy, and now I can’t imagine going back. As we look ahead, we know that life will keep evolving. From career to career, we adapt and grow, enjoying the journey together. Lee and I will keep riding through life, making the most of every minute and chasing after every coming opportunity.

SUNDAY PROFILE: Kristie Clark - local girl trying to make difference post-flood
SUNDAY PROFILE: Kristie Clark - local girl trying to make difference post-flood

13 July 2024, 7:57 PM

Kristie Clark is one of the key people in Lismore's flood recovery, working for the NSW Reconstruction Authority. Earlier this year, Kristie was awarded the Public Service Medal in the King's Birthday Honour List. There is a perception that most of the NSWRA staff are from out of town, but Kristie was born in Lismore and still lives in the Northern Rivers. Maive McKenzie sat down with Kristie to get her life story.I’m proud to call myself a true Northern Rivers local. I was born in Lismore, but most of my growing up happened in Coffs Harbour. Despite the kilometres between us, my heart was always drawn back up north to where my roots run deep with family and my fondest memories were spending time with my family and relatives who were scattered all across the Northern Rivers. I'm the eldest of four girls, growing up surrounded by the vibrant energy and sisterly bonds that come with having three siblings. We were quite the team, navigating childhood together with our own unique blend of mischief and laughter. While we each eventually spread our wings, and they settled down in Brisbane, the heart of our family remains anchored in the Northern Rivers, where Mum and Dad and our extended family still reside. As a kid, I was always diving headfirst into different committees and roles. Back in primary school, I proudly wore the badge of school captain, and in high school, I took on the responsibilities of vice-captain. Leadership has always been my thing – I thrived on organising, motivating others, and being a voice for my peers. Sports were another big part of my life, and I love netball. Not only did I play with passion, but I also found joy in coaching others, a role I fulfilled at Tweed until just a couple of years back. It wasn't just netball, though; I was interested in a wide range of sporting activities and have always been quite athletic. From a young age, I knew I wanted to be active and involved. Athletics, tennis and other sports were also in the mix, keeping me on my toes and fueling my drive to do more, to push myself further. When I was younger, my dream was to become a physiotherapist, driven by my passion for sports and the human body. From early on, I immersed myself in all things athletic, whether on the field or cheering from the sidelines. It was a natural fit for me, blending my fascination with movement and my desire to help others achieve their physical best, but eventually, I became incredibly interested in the human side of businesses going into HR later on. Beyond sports, my upbringing instilled in me a set of core values that shaped my character. I was taught from a young age the importance of good manners and respectful communication, especially when engaging with adults. These skills in communication and engagement became second nature to me, guiding how I interacted with people and approached challenges throughout my life. One of my earliest jobs was at the local newsagent, but even before that, I was already familiar with the world of work thanks to my mum, who was a hairdresser. As a kid, I pitched in, unofficially helping out with tasks like making appointments, sweeping the floor, folding the towels and any duties to help Mum keep the salon going. My career journey took me through various roles in HR and Project Management, setting a solid foundation for what was to come. One highlight was my involvement in the establishment of Service NSW and later, I served as the Chief Customer Officer at a Telco Authority, where I honed my skills in customer relations, service delivery and telecommunication operations. My passion for making a difference in the community led me to take on a significant role with Service NSW following the devastating floods. Living in the region at the time, I was deeply committed to supporting recovery efforts and helping my community rebuild stronger than ever. It was during this period that I worked closely with Resilience NSW to set up Recovery Centres and provide crucial assistance to those affected. Education-wise, I initially studied at Southern Cross University in Coffs Harbour before continuing my academic journey at Queensland University of Technology (QUT) in Brisbane, where I further developed my skills and knowledge in Business. During my university days, I was always on the go, juggling work and studies. I held a part-time job at Myer, while I balanced the course load. Working part-time at Myer and attending classes kept me busy, but I loved the service environment at Myer and the opportunity to connect with people. One particular memory stands out from my time in the dinnerware section at Myer. There was a colleague, a friendly lady, who often shared stories about her son. Over time, we struck up conversations beyond the usual customer service interactions, forming a bond over our conversations. As fate would have it, this lady eventually introduced me to her son. We grew closer, shared experiences, and later in life, we tied the knot. Looking back, I cherish those Myer days not only for the valuable work experience but also for the unexpected twist of fate that brought love into my life. Those university years taught me the importance of hard work, resilience, and the unpredictable ways life can unfold. They shaped not only my career path but also my personal journey, reminding me that every interaction, whether at work or elsewhere, can hold the potential for meaningful connections. After wrapping up my university years in Brisbane, life took me on a whirlwind journey across Australia. Initially, I settled in Adelaide and Canberra for a spell, where my husband served in the army. The unique experiences living in different cities were memorable, but soon we found ourselves back in Brisbane after he transitioned out of military life. Back in Brisbane, I delved deeper into my career in HR, while my husband embarked on a new chapter with the Federal Police, leading us to Sydney. In 2006, we exchanged vows, marking the beginning of a journey that has spanned nearly 18 years and counting. Our family grew with the arrival of two gorgeous girls, and as they were young, we made the decision to relocate back to Tweed to be closer to our extended family in the Northern Rivers. Two years ago, we made another move, this time to Kyogle, where we found ourselves settling into a tranquil lifestyle that felt like coming full circle. Nestled back in the Northern Rivers, we embraced the rural charm where we now tend to cows, chickens, and other critters while my husband has transitioned into a fulfilling role as a primary school teacher. I had been settled in the region here before the flood hit. When disaster struck, the CEO of the Service NSW reached out and asked me to return to service. It was a call to action that I couldn't ignore, and I felt deeply honoured to be able to contribute to the recovery efforts in the region I grew up in. After working in the initial response, I realised I wanted to continue to be involved in the recovery and rebuild of the Northern Rivers and stepped into a role to lead the delivery of the temporary housing program with Resilience NSW and then a role with the Reconstruction Authority leading one of the largest adaptation and relocation programs in Australia. The Resilient Homes and Resilient Lands Programs are not a simple rebuilding exercise, we’re working to make significant long-term changes to where people live, how we plan and prepare for future disasters and how we reduce risk across the Northern Rivers. At the same time, we want to help maintain the community and spirit of this great region. Outside of my professional life, I find joy and relaxation in a few cherished hobbies. Netball has been a passion of mine since childhood, and I still relish the opportunity to get on the court whenever I can.. It's not just about the game itself; it's also a chance to connect with others and stay active. There are many life lessons that can be applied from the game of netball. Another love of mine is gardening, which has evolved into a cherished pastime, especially since settling on our farm. There's something deeply satisfying about nurturing plants from seedlings to harvest, and it's a great way to unwind after a busy week. Overall, one of the most profound lessons my career has taught me is the importance of building lasting relationships. Throughout my journey, I've come to understand that these connections are not just professionally advantageous but rewarding on a personal level. Collaborating closely with others and fostering strong relationships has been instrumental in successfully delivering programs and initiatives aimed at supporting our community. When we prioritise making the community the heart of our efforts, we create a unified force capable of achieving meaningful impact. Being part of a team has also been a source of great fulfilment for me. I thrive in environments where teamwork is valued. Together, we can navigate challenges more effectively and celebrate successes as a collective. This collaborative spirit not only enhances productivity but also nurtures a sense of camaraderie and mutual support, making the journey more rewarding and enjoyable. When reflecting on my career journey thus far, one of my proudest achievements has been contributing to the recovery efforts following the 2022 flood. This region holds deep roots for my family, spanning generations and shaping my own upbringing. Having a personal connection to this area amplified my commitment to supporting its recovery and rebuilding. Being able to deliver impactful programs during such a challenging time stands out as a defining highlight of my career. It was not just about fulfilling professional duties but making a meaningful difference in the lives of those affected. Witnessing the tangible impact of our efforts, from providing essential services to fostering community resilience, filled me with a profound sense of fulfilment and purpose. This experience has reinforced my dedication to serving communities and utilising my skills to positively impact the places and people I care deeply about. It's a reminder of the importance of empathy, resilience, and collective action in overcoming adversity and fostering sustainable growth. Looking ahead to the future, my focus remains steadfast on continuing to deliver impactful outcomes for the Northern Rivers community. There is still a significant amount of work to be done, and I am committed to addressing key priorities such as the delivery of the Resilient Homes and Resilient Lands programs, long-term mitigation and adaptation strategies, and building community and business resilience for potential future flood events. My goal is to contribute to the resilience and sustainable development of this region that holds such personal significance for me and my family. I am passionate about leveraging my skills and experience to tackle these challenges, working collaboratively with my team and the community to achieve lasting and positive impacts. As I look forward, I am motivated by the opportunity to make a meaningful difference and contribute to the continued growth and prosperity of the Northern Rivers region.

SUNDAY PROFILE: Richard Creed - a real love for animals
SUNDAY PROFILE: Richard Creed - a real love for animals

29 June 2024, 11:35 AM

Richard Creed had two passions in his early life, dinosaurs and animals. Richard's passion for animals led him to Lismore in the early 1990s and he quickly fell in love with the community and became a highly respected vet. Maive McKenzie sat down with Richard to get his life story.I grew up right within Sydney in the western suburbs in a loving family. My father was an insurance broker, navigating the world of policies and premiums but my mum, on the other hand, was a stay-at-home mum, loving and caring for us deeply.The truth is, for a good chunk of my childhood, I harboured a rather fantastical dream: to become a palaeontologist. Dinosaurs weren’t just toys to me; they were giants that roamed the Earth millions of years ago, leaving behind a legacy of wonder. Digging up bones and piecing together their stories felt like the ultimate adventure. But that fascination, while intense, was fleeting. By the time I was a little bit older, a different passion had taken root – a love for animals that blossomed into a desire to become a vet.The truth is, animals have always held a special place in my heart. Ever since I can remember, they’ve filled my life with a kind of unconditional love and companionship that’s hard to describe. And picking a favourite is just the most impossible task! From the playful curiosity of a puppy to the regal grace of a horse, each creature brings something unique to the table. And that’s part of what makes being a vet so incredibly appealing.(Young Richard with the family cat August 1981)Sure, working with animals is a huge part of the draw, but it’s the variety that really keeps things interesting. One day you might be patching up a scraped knee on a rambunctious cat, the next you’re examining miniature ponies. It’s a never-ending adventure, and that’s exactly what I crave.So, Sydney Uni and the Bachelor of Veterinary Science program – that was the initial dream. Studied hard, poured my heart into that application, but for whatever reason, it wasn’t meant to be that first time around. I am not going lie, it stung a bit. But hey, that’s life. So, I dusted myself off, and started exploring other options.Zoology at Macquarie University caught my eye and the chance to delve deeper into the animal kingdom sounded like a fun kind of thing. I picked up the application materials, ready to dive headfirst into a new path. It's funny how things work though, because literally the very next day, I was accepted into Sydney Uni on second-round offers. It seemed the universe agreed this would be my path, and they had a spot for me after all. Needless to say, those Zoology brochures went straight into the recycling bin. I packed my bags, said goodbye, and marched straight into the program I'd always wanted.Talk about a rollercoaster ride to start off the journey. University turned out to be a fantastic experience. A whirlwind of late-night study sessions, early-morning lectures, and the thrill of finally understanding a complex concept. But what truly made those five years unforgettable was the incredible group of people I shared it with. We weren’t just classmates nodding at each other across a crowded lecture hall. We were a unit, a support system that saw each other through thick and thin.The beauty of the program being entirely in-person meant everything became a shared adventure. Throughout the course, all of the exams and the mountain of work were hard. It also meant that we were going to tackle it all together. We commiserated over bad grades, celebrated the good ones, and fueled each other with endless cups of coffee during those inevitable all-nighters before exams. The bond only grew stronger during our last year when we decided to live together.This made that last year of university even more special. University was definitely about getting an education, but for me, the real treasure was the close connections I built. Those friends became like a second family, the chosen kind you pick yourself, the ones you know you can count on, and the ones who’ll be there to reminisce about the crazy, unforgettable journey that was university.The vet life has been my whole professional career, but back in my university days, I had to earn some money and therefore started my own gardening business. I would garden for folks in the neighbourhood doing the whole package from mowing lawns to trimming hedges. To get my name out there, I would put out flyers I made and did the good ol’ letterbox drops. University was certainly not just about textbooks and lectures, and during my last couple of years the course required a practical placement component, and that’s where things got interesting. I landed a spot in Coffs Harbour for the prac – a beautiful coastal town, by the way. The person who I worked for ended up being good mates with the vet who ran the Lismore practice at the time, David Jones.David ended up calling my boss to check in on how I was doing, and when he heard things were going well, he offered me a job when I got straight out of uni! “Lismore?” I thought at first. “Where on earth is Lismore?” Despite not previously knowing the town, I decided to head up for an interview anyway.Once I arrived, you could tell this was a special community, and the place itself was even more beautiful than I imagined. Originally, I figured I’d stick around for about two years, back in 1992. Well, two years turned into three years, and three years turned into three decades, and I haven’t looked back since. Lismore became my home. That job offer from David turned into a lifelong career.When I first got started way back in January 1992, I was fresh out of uni and full of wide-eyed optimism. I figured I’d stick around for a couple of years, gain some experience, and then maybe head off on some new adventure. But life, as it often does, had other plans.(Wedding with wife, Cheryl December 1997)Fast forward a year. I was catching up with some friends from university, and they weren’t exactly brimming with job satisfaction. Hearing them grumble about their work situations honestly took me by surprise. Here I was, loving every minute at the practice and really enjoying becoming part of the community. It made me realise just how lucky I was. That, combined with the amazing people I worked with, solidified my decision to stay put. Little did I know my dedication would pay off in a big way. Within 4-5 years, I found myself becoming a partner at the practice, which was such a memorable moment that I would never forget. If I were to pick out the most memorable moments from this career, it would be a tough one. It’s true; sometimes, the things that stick with you the most are the bumps in the road, the challenges you overcome. But becoming a partner at the practice? Now, that was a moment etched permanently in my memory. A true turning point, a chance to really take ownership of something I’d poured so much heart and soul into.Of course, it's not all about the big milestones. There are the quieter moments that stay with you. The ones that tug at your heartstrings. Like the time, twenty years ago now, when I had to help a woman say goodbye to her beloved dog. She wrote a beautiful poem for her furry friend, and the depth of her love for that animal was just unforgettable. It’s those moments, the connections we build with both animals and their humans, that truly make this job special. They remind you of the profound impact we can have, even in the face of loss.Overall, this job is way more than just a paycheck; it’s incredibly rewarding. You get to be a part of something truly special: the bond between people and their pets. From the excitement of welcoming a new puppy into the family to the heartbreaking goodbyes at the end of a long life, you’re there to share in these momentous moments, and it’s so wonderful to not just be a part of it but to be able to connect with every person who walks through the door. (Richard & his dog Nacho)One of the most incredible things about these relationships is that some span generations. Take the farmer I used to work with, for example. When I first met him, his daughter was just barely two years old, toddling around the farm and now she’s all grown up, running the whole operation! Watching families grow alongside their furry companions, that’s the kind of thing that stays with you. It’s those connections, those long-lasting relationships, that make this job truly special.However, this job can be really challenging and can also be very draining. It’s most certainly a high-pressure job and when you’re dealing with something as precious as a beloved pet’s health, there’s no room for error. Every decision carries weight. On top of that, it’s an emotionally charged environment. You have to be on your toes, ready to navigate the rollercoaster of emotions that come with caring for animals and their worried owners.Furthermore, it is a 24/7 practice. This isn’t a profession where you can clock out at 5pm and forget about it. If an animal has a medical emergency in the middle of the night, you jump up and answer the call. It’s part of the deal, the responsibility that comes with being a vet and it can be demanding, for sure, but being able to be there and help out is also very rewarding. While the job comes with both highs and lows, I have had my loving family beside me all through it.I met my partner in 1996, and we have been married for 26 wonderful years. We have had two children and they are all grown up now, spreading their wings and making their mark on the world. They’ve all flown the coop and landed in Brisbane, and while we miss them dearly, we are so proud of them.(Family photo September 2023)Besides, my family is still close by, thanks to my folks. They made a wise move. Settling down in Ballina and having them in the region is a real treat, a chance to catch up and create some more memories together.Coming and starting work in Lismore and becoming part of this community has been such a lively experience. It’s more than just a place on a map or what people see on the news. If I were to sum it up into one word, I would say eclectic. It is a beautiful mishmash of people, backgrounds, and beliefs, all woven together into a community. And the thing I love most about Lismore is that it embraces everyone, no questions asked. You can be whoever you want to be, quirks and all, and you’ll be welcomed with open arms.I have a friend down on the South Coast, and their kid came out as transgender, and my friend is worried sick about violence and bullying. I had immediately thought about telling her to move to Lismore! Lismore is a place where you can be your authentic self, without fear of judgement. And that’s something special, something truly worth cherishing.There’s a real sense of community here, a feeling that you're not alone, that you belong. Now, that doesn’t mean we’re all sunshine and rainbows all the time. There are disagreements, sure, and the occasional bump in the road. But at the core of Lismore, at the very heart, it’s about acceptance, it's about celebrating our differences and I am so glad that I ended up here and in the community with the people I care about and doing a job I love. 

SUNDAY PROFILE: Millur Gao - Lismore's newest optometrist
SUNDAY PROFILE: Millur Gao - Lismore's newest optometrist

22 June 2024, 8:00 PM

Millur Gao is one of Lismore's newest residents and optometrists. He is a second-generation Australian who has now called Lismore home. Maive McKenzie sat down with Millur to get his life story.I grew up in the vibrant city of Sydney, where I spent my primary years, soaking in the urban energy until a family decision took us up north to the, at the time, quieter shores of the Gold Coast.This move wasn’t driven by necessity but by a desire for a change of pace. The Gold Coast offered a more relaxed atmosphere, a stark contrast to the hustle and bustle of Sydney.Growing up as a second-generation Australian, I had always felt a strong sense of responsibility to work hard and aim for a future in which I could support my immigrant parents. To be able to give them a comfortable life, which they had given me. While navigating the bustling world around me, I discovered a passion for numbers. Mathematics had intrigued me from a young age, leading me to consider a future in engineering. Biomedical engineering also sparked my curiosity, but the idea of spending hours glued to a computer screen wasn't appealing to me. I had always craved social interaction and a field that would allow me to connect with people. Health-related professions seemed like a good fit, and after some exploration, optometry emerged as the perfect blend of science and human connection.My work life began early. From the moment I was legally allowed to work, I jumped into the world of fast food and retail. These experiences were certainly a lot, as most people who worked in these fields know, but it was a great experience and I believe that it gave me a lot of valuable lessons. I loved being able to connect with people, which has transferred to my career now.During my studies, I was also able to run my own BMX bike business as a side hustle, reaching customers all over Australia. Education was so pivotal in my life and something I enjoyed.I attended the prestigious Queensland Academy for Health Sciences, a selective high school that surrounded me with like-minded individuals who shared my drive and my passions, and I was glad to form valuable friendships there.This environment further solidified my desire to pursue a career in healthcare. When it came to university, my choice was clear: Queensland University of Technology (QUT). Here, I got to immerse myself in this world of vision science and optometry, earning my Bachelor's and Master’s degrees, which would become the foundation for my future career. University wasn't all textbooks and lectures. Working part-time as a dispensing optical technician during those years became a turning point. Sure, I honed my customer service skills (which came in handy!), but the real revelation was witnessing the impact optometry has on people's lives – that's when I knew this was the career path for me.The experience was like a window into the world of optometry, perfectly merging my passion for science with the human connection I wanted. I was also fortunate enough to be the President of the Queensland Optometry Student Society, where I was able to connect students with industry leaders. I also got the opportunity to volunteer and help out with organisations like OneSight and Salvos to provide glasses for those in need. Doing this was so incredible and it was a blessing to make a tangible impact on people's lives. This experience solidified a growing sense of social responsibility within me, a commitment that pushed me to look beyond a typical career path.I practised on the Goldie before I decided to move to Lismore. The lack of qualified and permanent optometrists in rural areas felt like a calling – a chance to use my arsenal of skills to serve a community in need. Of course, transitioning to Lismore wasn't a walk in the park. Having moved to a new town by myself was challenging. The pace here was different, and the environment was unfamiliar. But I quickly became part of the community. I joined a local gym, and actively sought ways to connect with the community, such as the Parkrun.The warmth and welcoming nature of the people in Lismore truly shone through. This town offered a strong sense of community, a deep respect for each other, and a down-to-earth vibe.These days, I find myself practising optometry in a lovely store here in Lismore. It's allowed me to build close relationships with my patients, something I truly cherish. The profession itself keeps me engaged. I love the intricate details, the problem-solving that comes with every case, and the immense satisfaction of helping people. Every patient brings a unique challenge and it's incredibly rewarding.Though I'm still a fresh face in the field, my professional journey feels like it's just getting started. But my life outside of work has already taken a whole new turn.Moving to Lismore wasn't just about a change of scenery; it was a chance to branch out professionally and contribute to regional healthcare. The demand for optometrists here was an exciting opportunity to establish myself and use my skills in a setting unlike that of the bigger cities. Lismore also resonated with me on a personal level. It had this strong sense of community that offered a sense of belonging and support. Sure, settling into a new town with limited social connections wasn't easy. But that's part of the adventure! One of the unexpected joys of working in a smaller practice is the chance to build deeper connections with my patients. Spending more time with each person allows me to truly understand their unique needs and concerns. These interactions are a constant reminder of the human element in my profession, the part that truly fuels my passion.Being part of a smaller healthcare team here in Lismore has been another eye-opener. Collaborating with the staff and local doctors fosters a real sense of camaraderie and shared purpose. It's a fantastic learning environment where I can benefit from the experience of my colleagues.The future is an exciting open book for me. I'm not one for rigid five-year plans; I'm more interested in embracing the present and letting Lismore show me where life wants to take me. One thing's for sure though – I'm committed to this community and see myself staying put for a good while. This opens up some fantastic possibilities!My journey here is just taking off, and the road ahead promises both challenges and rewards, and I can’t wait to see what the future brings.  

SUNDAY PROFILE: Michael Woods - A Band of Brothers
SUNDAY PROFILE: Michael Woods - A Band of Brothers

15 June 2024, 8:00 PM

The name Michael Woods is synonymous with local rugby league and he is best known for having coached Marist Brothers to multiple premierships during the nineties. “Woodsy’, has a Wayne Bennett type personality and his innate understanding of the game, is matched only by his capacity to engage with individual players, in a way that brings the best out of them and critically, within a team environment. His positive influence on numerous players over the past several decades, has made Woods a very respected person within the local rugby league community. I have written many Sunday Profiles and most of the people who I have written about have been initially reluctant to put themselves ‘front and centre’. Despite having known Michael Woods for many years, I did not anticipate being given some homework in response to my request to chat with Michael. I was instructed to read the 2012 publication called ‘Marist Brothers 100 Years’, as compulsory research for this article. Why? It is because so much of who Michael Woods is, as a man, is outlined within the words and images of that publication, with themes that Michael reiterated over and over, as we sat down to talk about his life.Michael Woods was born in Sydney, but he spent his first nine years living in New Guinea. Michael’s father Peter (who was an accountant) and mum Noela, took their young family to Rabaul, a former provincial capital of East New Britain in Papua New Guinea, located in the north-eastern part of the country. My immediate reaction was to quiz Michael about ‘life in New Guinea’ and he spoke of attending a Catholic Primary School and being a very active lad, saying that it was a ’wild time’. There was no organised sport, but Michael recalls plenty of activity that was loosely described as a form of sport. The family necessarily left PNG, when political and civil unrest created a situation that was untenable for the Woods family.Life back in Australia for Michael, was initially at Barraba, near Tamworth, where his mother’s family came from and as the eldest of eight boys and one sister, Jenny, he grew up on the Tablelands. It was Michael’s grandfather who believed strongly about the benefits of playing sport. Michael was introduced to rugby league and over the next six decades, he has maintained a continuous involvement, never missing a single season, whether as a player, trainer or coach.Twelve year old Michael was sent to boarding school at Woodlawn College. Michael speaks with much appreciation about how his time at Woodlawn created a way forward that changed his life for the better. The strong rugby league culture at Woodlawn had an indelible influence on the young lad and Michael says that the environment set the tone about how he would see and understand the game. Michael met the late Bob Delaney, who would become a valued team-mate through their High School years and who would remain a very close friend. School footy was a central part of Michael’s world, where he was predominantly a lock, but he also played prop and selection in the Woodlawn First XIII, was considered to be a highlight, given the competitive status that existed at the college.Michael inherited a deep love of the game, building many friendships, that he embraced and despite his ‘wild’ early days, Michael would progressively develop into a person who he credits as being a consequence of having great friends around him and critically, rugby league. There was never any question that Michael had a good work ethic and he spent school holidays working as a labourer wherever work existed back home on the Tablelands. Michael went to the University of NSW, however an anticipated career in commerce, proved ill-conceived, with Michael conceding that he was not adequately focused on academic rigour. The most apparent purpose for Michael being at University, was to give him the opportunity to play footy at the equivalent of the now State Cup competition level and he was going well enough to be identified and recruited by South Sydney in 1975 as a ‘country import’.The time at South Sydney proved to be a pivotal time, albeit the real learnings from that stint, would only make sense in due course. Woods played in the Under 23 team in what could be described as an introduction that Michael recalls as being ‘not immediately favourable’, Michael found himself suspended for eight weeks, for an off-field incident that would ironically prove to define his coaching philosophy beyond that moment. On the field, Woods progressed to First Grade (on the bench) in 1976, with Souths coached by Johnny King. Woods started the next season in the First Grade squad, coached by John ‘Lurch’ O’Neill, but got badly injured (that wretched knee) and that ended any possibility of a serious playing career. Michael quit university and moved back to Barraba. He tried to play, but that dodgy knee had other ideas and despite several ‘comebacks’, injury would halt his playing days.Bob Delaney and Kim Evans were each teaching at Woodlawn and Bob convinced Michael to move to Ballina, where the three mates shared a house. Delaney and Evans were playing First Grade for Ballina and asked Woods to don the boots again and play, but it was a forlorn campaign as the troublesome knee would soon fail yet again!! Woods had been involved as a trainer for many years, in addition to his role as a player and had in fact been a trainer at South Sydney, so the role continued locally. Woods started as trainer with Marist Brothers, joining Bob Delaney who was head coach at Brothers in 1983, Kim Evans, who also joined Brothers, with Woods also being the trainer at Lismore City Rugby Club. The Woodlawn connection also found Woods appointed as assistant coach of the First XIII at Woodlawn, with Kim Evans, in addition to some paid employment doing residential work at the College.Woods enrolled in the Sports Science course at Northern Rivers College of Advanced Education (now Southern Cross University) and a growing reputation as a competent exercise and sports technician, saw him get involved with Ballina Athletics Club, where he worked with numerous athletes, including Sharyn Saxby, who went on to become a National Champion middle-distance runner. The involvement with athletics opened doors for Woods and he was recruited into a role with the Queensland Academy of Sport and a role with the National Jumps Team, that was based at the QAS. During that tenure, Woods worked with athletes who competed at the 2014, 2018 and 2022 Commonwealth Games, in addition to the 2016 and 2020 Olympics. Since 1985, Woods has established himself as a ‘go to person’ for injury management, chronic pain, recovery and preparation, which has aligned well to his broad involvement in league and further demonstrated his versality and skills.Michael takes me back to 1976, to put context into his earlier reference to a moment of volatility, injury and suspension, that proved to be a positive influence on who he would become. He describes his connection with rugby league as a game that teaches so much about life, saying, ‘It is a tough sport and is about dealing with adversity, celebrating success and more than anything, about the appreciation of mates and family’. He quips, ‘ I am grateful that I have been able to meet so many wonderful people during my involvement with the game.’Woods would take on the role as Head Coach at Marist Brothers in 1993. As recorded in the club’s 100 years centenary book and validated by Woods, the major change made in 1993, was to establish a Coaching Panel, to implement consistent processes, for the purpose of creating a whole club framework. The initial panel consisted of Kim Evans, John Mayes, Ron Hughes, Dave Latta and Michael Woods. What a visionary initiative this has proved to be for Marist Brothers, that was established in 1912 and remains a strong rugby league club in this region.My efforts to talk with Michael about trophies won was quickly shut down. He was insistent on talking about objectives to ensure that the club is underpinned by an environment where individuals can enjoy the experience of being part of a club family, where they can become better people. It was clear at this point in the conversation, that the otherwise unflappable and quietly spoken Woods, was uncomfortable talking in terms of ‘I” and for him it is always about team values. He further spoke with much pride about being part of a club that exists as a collective beyond the individual players who take to the field each season and where Michael says that he has learnt so much. Woods makes special mention of the influence of the late Charlie Wade and the late Budgie Malone, about which he says he will be eternally grateful. Michael quotes Charlie as saying, ‘What are we here for? Better players or better people? ALWAYS better people. It is NEVER about the winning!’Woods put context into that sentiment, saying, ‘It is true that Brothers were very successful in the eighties and nineties, but it has always been more about friends, families and respect for others.’ As a coach, Woods says that he believes that how he speaks with players, is paramount. He says adamantly, ‘What we have created at Brothers means that culture has become player driven, club driven and regardless of the depth or continuity of players, Brothers believes in the players, club values and the systems in place.’ He further states, ‘The history books record periods of exceptional success and I am humbled to have worked consistently with so many high quality players, but beyond this, people (on and off the field), were inspirational through their commitment, leadership and generosity.’ Woods highlights the club mantra that endorses that EVERY team and EVERY level deserves equal opportunity, saying that the achievement of the Club Championship (noting that Brothers has dominated this award in local league since 1979), is evidence of the priorities that the club proudly upholds.Beyond the local football scene, Woods was coach of the Melbourne Storm Colts through 2004-05, where he mentored former NRL stars Greg Inglis, Adam Blair and Sika Manu. He was also involved with the Titans Colts, telling me that the experience with the ever-evolving professionalism of rugby league, has been a valuable experience. Woods has a holistic perspective of rugby league and this was shown in recent years, where he was Head Coach of the Kyogle Rugby League Club, supporting that club when it needed assistance. He is now predominately coaching juniors and he is the Brothers Under 16’s coach this season. My observation is that these lads are exceptionally fortunate to have such a competent coach and positive human being at the helm.(Michael and Kerri with and son-in-law Lee Nagorcka and daughters Lauren, Georgia and Kate)The fiercely private Woods, lets his guard down for a brief moment, when I ask about his family. Michael offers a succinct and heartfelt tribute to his wife Kerri and daughters Lauren , Kate and Georgia, saying, ‘The only reason that I have been able to follow my passion for rugby league, is because of the support that Kerri and each of our daughters have given me.’ He further says, ‘Being bestowed Life Membership of Marist Brothers Rugby League Football Club in 2003, was humbling, but without Kerri and our daughters, I could not have done a fraction of what I have been able to do.’ For those who know the Woods family, I am sure that they will agree that they epitomise the values that Michael describes as being engrained within the club DNA and all applaud the contribution that this family has made to Marist Brothers.            Terry Dardengo was one of Woods’ many trusty lieutenants during the ‘Golden Run’ from 1993-2003, when Brothers played in nine out of ten grand finals, winning seven. I asked Terry for a comment about his former coach, to which he replied, ‘Michael was a coach who was a generation in front of the times. He rarely spoke about winning or losing. It was all about the performance and conduct, on and of the field.’ Michael would say,’ We will never be dictated to by the scoreboard.’ Michael’s focus was on getting every player to perform at their very best, week in, week out and if we did that, the scoreboard would look after itself.’(Marist Brothers First Grade Premiers1994)Michael’s great friend Steve Campbell perhaps described Michael best, when he wrote the following words that I found in the 2012 publication, referencing the 2003 First Grade side’s come from behind win in the grand final, from 13 points down with seven minutes to go, to win by two points. Campbell wrote, ‘Michael’s belief in his players could never be questioned and that is one of the qualities that set him apart.’Absolutely a wonderful example of what a ‘Band of Brothers’ means. Marist Brothers Football Club, rugby league more broadly and the community, have been blessed to have another local champion in Michael Woods.Well played Michael and thanks for your contribution on so many levels.

SUNDAY PROFILE: Darlene Cook - so much more than a Lismore City Councillor
SUNDAY PROFILE: Darlene Cook - so much more than a Lismore City Councillor

08 June 2024, 8:00 PM

Most people would know Darlene Cook as a Lismore City Councillor for the last eight years. Darlene has declared she will not be a candidate in the September local council elections. As you will read, Darlene has experienced a long and diverse life and has overcome life's hurdles and prejudices by taking it in her stride and looking to help make meaningful societal changes. Maive McKenzie sat down with Darlene to get her life story.I was born in Sydney in February 1956 at the Crown Street Women’s Hospital. Due to the social norms of the era, my unmarried mother made the difficult decision to give me up for adoption. Fortunately, I was then adopted by a family who, despite their own medical condition that prevented them from having children naturally, welcomed me as their fourth child out of a total of five. (Me at 3 – 1959 with brothers Keith and Graham)In recent years, I have become the family historian, researching the backgrounds of our birth families. This endeavour allowed me to reconnect my eldest sister and brother with their respective birth families, which I am just so glad I could do that for them. I was even able to locate my own birth mother, though I was legally prohibited from contacting her due to a contact veto; while I wish I could’ve connected with her, I have no hard feelings about her decision.My adopted dad worked at a woollen mill in Sydney, which had originally been started by my great-grandfather but was sold during World War II. Tragically, my dad passed away at a relatively young age, in his 50s. Given the social norms of the time, my adopted mum did not have a job, though she was an active member of the NSW Liberal Ladies Council. Ironically, her children ended up aligning with either the Labor or Greens political parties, showcasing the diverse perspectives that can emerge within a single family.(Me at 6 – family home 1962 Chatswood)I had never envisioned myself becoming a local councillor, but my initial interest in this role stemmed from an opportunity presented by my school on the North Shore of Sydney. In 1971, the Ku-ring-gai council established a youth council, and I was selected as one of the two representatives from my school. This experience proved to be both exciting and eye-opening, as it allowed me to gain a perspective on the workings of a local council. Prior to this, my understanding of councils was rather limited, typically associating them with roads, rates and rubbish. However, my involvement in the youth council revealed a much broader and more complex scope of responsibilities and decision-making processes.When I was young, I had a whole different plan in mind for my career. I really wanted to be a vet, but things didn't quite work out because I didn't hit the grades needed to go down that path and back then, there weren't any career advisors, and things like that, so I didn't even know I could start the medical degree I was accepted for and then switch later on.So, I ended up going for Arts Law at the University of Sydney instead. It was a pretty cool time because I was part of the first group to get free education thanks to Gough Whitlam's policy. That move really opened up doors for a lot of us. It was such an incredible era; Lionel Murphy rewrote the Family Law Act, and Gough Whitlam created a paid welfare allowance for single-parent families. These shifts really shaped the whole scene back then, making it a super exciting and impactful time. After realising that Arts Law wasn't the right fit for me, I made the bold decision to drop out and pursue a different path in rural NSW. I found myself working on beef cattle and vegetable growing farms, immersing myself in a world dominated by men. (Me at about 20 ish - property I worked on at Nymboida so around 1976 – dog’s name was Cherie.)Despite the initial scepticism from my male coworkers, I embraced the physical demands of the jobs and honed my strength. The challenges were tough (it seemed I always got the horse that liked to buck you off or the tractor with no brakes), but I persevered, always picking myself up after each setback.During my years in the agricultural sector, I took on various roles, including stripping bark off timber pit props at the Nymboida coal mine. This particular mine had a unique history - it was on the verge of closure due to lack of profitability, but the miners, refusing to accept layoffs, kept returning to work. Eventually, the union stepped in and the workers took ownership of the mine, making it the first union-owned and operated coal mine in Australia.I ultimately decided to leave those positions due to a significant life change - I had met someone special. In 1982, I fell in love with an amazing woman, and I made the decision to move to Dorroughby to be with her. At that time, coming out as a member of the LGBTQIA+ community was incredibly difficult and my former colleagues chose to ignore or avoid the topic altogether.However, taking this leap of faith and moving in with Vera proved to be an exhilarating and fulfilling experience. With her being a fair bit older and having three teenage children, it was an entirely different world. During this time, I found employment at a macadamia plantation where I dedicated ten years to working in their nursery, specialising in growing and grafting the young trees. Vera and I and a friend of ours, Mike Bray, started Gay Waves on 2NCR-FM in 1984. A campaign was launched by the media, some churches, and a number of other individuals with the intention of throwing us off the air; however, the radio station protected us. It turned out to be a lifeline for a great number of people because it allowed us to dispel false information, disseminate factual information, inform people about important events that were taking place, and also expose them to poetry and music from the LGBTQIA+ community. Vera and I split up after ten years; I was then thirty-six years old, and at that time I was experiencing knee and back problems, and I considered myself to be in need of a new direction in my life.  So, I went to TAFE “O” Week, and a woman approached me and suggested that I come and look into obtaining a certificate in bookkeeping. I loved the course so much that I decided to convert it into an advanced diploma in accounting. I went on the dole and quit my job in order to focus on my studies until I began working in the community sector.(Lismore TAFE 1996 with Andrea Hughes – head of business services. I got the Highest Graded Pass award in Adv Dip Accounting)I began my bookkeeping career by working for SCU Student Representative Council, and later went on to work for the Casino Family Support and local disability organisations. Eventually, I became a founding finance officer for the Northern Rivers Community Legal Centre. Trying to juggle grants and the increasing demands for services and to keep on top of where all the money goes was a challenge that I enjoyed. I also worked for some time with local financial auditors, and that made me feel almost like a money detective! In April of 1994, I met my current partner Angela, who was employed on the same macadamia farm as I was. Angela also became a founding member of the Northern Rivers Community Legal Centre and went on to be their general manager for twenty years. Our life together has involved many social justice campaigns - for equal pay; stopping domestic violence; ending live export of cattle and sheep; stopping coal seam gas fracking in our area; advocating for tenants’ rights, and marriage equality among them.Angela and I recently celebrated being together for thirty years. After working in the financial industry for twenty years, I realised that I wanted to make another change in my career.I was able to attend a forum that Jenny Dowell hosted in 2016 on the role of women in local government. The purpose of the forum was to encourage women to diversify local government with people who had expertise and knowledge in a variety of fields. Consequently, I put my name forward for that, and since I was already a member of the Labor Party, I was placed on Isaac Smith's ticket, and I was elected in September 2016.I have served on the council for a total of eight years, two terms, and I have also served on a variety of committees and advisory groups, including as Lismore’s representative on Rous County Council. I also championed the creation of Lismore Council’s Audit Risk and Improvement Committee, which deals with risk management and financial accountability. I am currently the chairperson of the Richmond Tweed Regional Library, which is a consortium consisting of four councils coming together to provide library services across our region.   One of the most significant events that occurred during my time on council was the marriage equality campaign in 2017. It was a very emotional experience speaking in Council of my life as an out gay person in Lismore and the changes that have taken place in our society over forty years; from the era in which gay people were vilified and jailed for the crime of homosexuality through to the more enlightened and accepting world we live in today. Over time, the world has undergone significant transformations in attitudes to gay people, and the last big hurdle was the establishment of marriage equality. I proposed a motion to have the rainbow flag fly at Council Chambers until the law was changed. It was massive for so many of us to have the rainbow flag flying over Lismore and for Lismore Council to support this campaign.  I did get my first death threat from that, they threatened to kill me, to pull down the flag, and to attack staff at the council. Amazing how something as simple as a flag can upset some people. The world has changed so much in my lifetime for women; when I was young, women lost their jobs when they announced they were getting married. I discovered in 1975 that a woman couldn’t get her own car loan or mortgage or credit cards without a man signing his permission. Women and children were seen as being owned by their fathers, husbands, and brothers. My mum couldn't go overseas or get a passport without my father’s permission. It’s incredible to see what has changed for some of us here in Australia; but I am aware that nothing has changed for women in many parts of the world.  Some of the most rewarding aspects of being a councillor is actually achieving outcomes for people. People email us and telephone us and say they have this problem and can I help? I get to advocate a solution for them and sometimes it’s just getting the pothole fixed or the garbage collected; but for others it could be major neighbourhood disputes about developments around them.  We’ve had the flood in 2017, fires in 2019, another flood in 2022, our community has gone through so much in the past few years. People are very stressed and as councillors we’ve seen the changes in requests for help from our community; people are asking for help with damaged homes, having nowhere to live, demanding affordable land releases, help in relocating. They are stressed and angry that help for the recovery of the city is so slow. Listening to them, talking with them, and trying to find people and service organisations to help our community; talking with recovery and reconstruction organisations is now a big part of the role of Councillor, and while I too feel frustrated about the lack of communication from the reconstruction body, I am so glad I have been able to be there at this time, and to make even a small difference in some people’s lives. I’m not running in the council elections in September. It’s time for yet another change in direction and a new chapter in my life. Not sure what that next venture will look like, but Angela and I are looking forward to doing some travelling in the next few years, both here in Australia and some overseas trips too. Keep an eye on this spot! 

SUNDAY PROFILE: Lacy Lola giving her life to help Lismore in emergencies
SUNDAY PROFILE: Lacy Lola giving her life to help Lismore in emergencies

01 June 2024, 8:02 PM

Lacy Lola is a person who loves animals and loves helping her community. Those caring qualities saw her volunteer with the SES in 2014 before becoming the Lismore Unit Commander and now in a NRs role at Goonellabah. When an emergency happens, Lacy is one of the friendly faces you want to see. Maive McKenzie sat down with Lacy to learn her life story.I was born in Manly, New South Wales, known for having the best rugby team. Growing up, I spent many weekends watching my dad and brother play for Manly Marlins while helping out in the canteen and grew a great love for it. (This is actually from a 'diary entry' I made when I was little - found post 2017 floods. I have attached the original, but it is a photo of my dad holding me after one of his games in Manly.)(Lacy at about 5 or 6 with her Mum and one of her brothers)However, as I entered High School, agriculture really had an impact on me. I was a part of the Richmond High School Agricultural Show Team- showing prize-winning cattle and sheep across NSW and the ACT. There was a strong emphasis on resilience and teamwork, which was ingrained in me from an early age, and would come to define my emergency services career. (Showing a Hereford cross steer at Canberra Royal (approx 2005)My family background displayed diverse careers, with my mum working as a government contractor, my stepdad serving as a Sergeant 1st Class in the US Special Forces, my dad as a corrections officer, and my step-mum showcasing her culinary skills as a chef. These varied influences instilled a deep appreciation for different professions and the value of hard work.Initially, my career path seemed set on becoming an equine nurse, blending my passion for animals and agriculture. Agriculture and farming had always been such a staple in my life, so working with animals, especially horses, grabbed me immediately. However, juggling early morning shifts at the racing track, studying, and working long hours, I found myself growing weary of the demanding routine. (Lacy riding Tommy.)However, a significant life event, with my step-dad's passing, led to my mum’s move to Lismore, and eventually moving here myself in November, 2007. I fell in love with the place instantly. The people you meet here, the community we have, in a location that can give you a taste of the beach, bush and city in a short ride.The shift to Lismore brought about a new chapter in my life, steering me towards a path of community service. The move sparked a newfound passion for helping others in times of crisis, leading me to explore opportunities in emergency services. Despite the challenges of transitioning from veterinary care to a new career focus, I embraced the change with an open heart and a determination to make a difference in my community.My educational journey is as diverse as my career path. My experience within the NSW SES saw me gain an interest in law enforcement and attend Charles Sturt University. This blend of academic and career-oriented pursuits equipped me with a unique set of skills and perspectives, which later brought me to my being employed by the NSW SES as an Operations Readiness Officer.(a selfie in a flood boat during training)Before finding my calling with the SES, I had a variety of jobs that added to my rich tapestry of experiences. I joined the Lismore Workers Club in 2014, where I took on roles as a bartender and worked my way up to Supervisor and then to Duty Manager. These positions honed my interpersonal skills, teaching me how to manage stressful situations and connect with people from all walks of life. Each job, in its way, prepared me for the multifaceted demands of emergency service work.The State Emergency Service appealed to me for several reasons. The diverse range of opportunities within the SES intrigued me, offering a dynamic and challenging environment where no two days were the same. This variety promised a career that was both fulfilling and constantly evolving. The comprehensive training provided to SES members was another significant factor. It promised not only personal growth but also the ability to make a tangible difference in my community. The combination of these factors made the SES an attractive career choice.My journey with the SES, starting in 2014 as a volunteer with the Lismore City unit, has been marked by numerous challenges and impactful moments. Each call-out and emergency situation has tested my skills and resolve, pushing me to grow as a leader and an individual. Despite the inherent difficulties, I have found immense satisfaction in being able to assist those in need and being part of a strong team. The ability to provide comfort and aid during crises has reinforced my commitment to the SES and its mission.(Lacy and the SES mascot 'Paddy the Platypus')My role in the SES and becoming Unit Commander in 2020-2022, has also brought about significant personal growth. The rigorous training and diverse experiences have equipped me with a wide range of skills, from emergency response techniques to leadership and teamwork. The sense of accomplishment that comes from successfully navigating complex situations and helping others is a constant source of motivation for me.One of the most rewarding aspects of my work with the SES is the sense of community it fosters. Being part of a dedicated team that shares a common goal of serving and protecting the community has been incredibly fulfilling. The camaraderie and mutual support among SES members create a strong sense of belonging and purpose. This environment has allowed me to build lasting relationships and develop a deep sense of loyalty to the team and the community we serve. However, one of the most demanding aspects of this work with the SES has been responding to floods, a recurring natural disaster in Lismore. These situations have not only tested my physical and logistical capabilities but also taken an emotional toll on both the SES members and the broader community. Flood responses are often chaotic and require quick thinking, efficient coordination, and a high level of preparedness. The emotional weight of seeing families displaced, properties destroyed, and lives disrupted can be immense. Despite these challenges, we remained steadfast, finding strength in our commitment to assist those in need. However, while grief was rampant after the loss of homes and businesses, specifically after the 2017 and 2022 floods, many turned their anger to the SES volunteers, some even spitting on them in 2017. Being someone who is protective over my team, this was hard to grapple with.(Undertaking cave rescue training at Wellington Caves in 2017)Yet, working with the SES has profoundly impacted my perspective on life and community service. It has broadened my understanding of the diverse communities within Lismore and highlighted the crucial role of volunteering. Through my experiences, I have seen firsthand the importance of coming together in times of crisis and the powerful difference that dedicated volunteers can make. This realisation has reinforced my belief in the value of helping others and strengthened her resolve to continue serving her community.Throughout my career, I have accumulated a wealth of memorable moments and rewarding experiences. One of the highlights has been the friendships and connections I have formed with fellow SES members and community residents. These relationships have been a source of support and camaraderie, making the demanding nature of emergency service work more bearable and fulfilling. Additionally, I take great pride in witnessing the growth and development of new SES members. Seeing them acquire essential skills and evolve into valuable assets for the community has been immensely satisfying.(In Deniliquin as a Beacon Operator, monitoring the jobs coming in during the 2023 flood events across western and southern NSW)My leadership abilities have also been a significant aspect of my SES journey. Serving as Unit Commander required me to demonstrate strong organisational and leadership skills. In this capacity, I was responsible for coordinating response efforts, managing resources, and ensuring the safety and effectiveness of my team. The sense of accomplishment that comes from successful search and rescue operations is another rewarding aspect of this work. Finding missing persons during search operations is particularly gratifying, providing a sense of closure and relief to affected families. These successful missions underscore the vital role that the SES plays in the community and the profound impact that dedicated service can have on individuals’ lives.While I have taken a position in Goonellabah and handed the Unit Commander hat over, Lismore still has such a strong place in my heart as I continue to volunteer there. (Lacy's nephew & Lacy from when I was nominated for 2023 Lismore Citizen of the Year during the Australia Day Awards)If anyone were to ask me if they should join or volunteer, I wouldn't hesitate to say yes. I’ve learned and grown to be both a part of a team but also to be closer within our community. There are so many options within the SES, whether you want to work in administration or go out and get your hands dirty, so if you're thinking about doing it, then do it. I did, and I have no regrets.

SUNDAY PROFILE: Peter Gahan and his Fields of Dream
SUNDAY PROFILE: Peter Gahan and his Fields of Dream

25 May 2024, 8:02 PM

Anyone who has been involved in cricket or baseball in Lismore during the past century, will likely know a descendent of the Gahan family. Several generations of the exceptionally talented Gahan family, have etched their name into baseball and cricket folklore. Peter Gahan was a very handy cricketer, having represented Country NSW, which was a good achievement at a time when local cricket was arguably at its best level, but he is best known for his pedigree as a baseballer. I have known Peter and his family since the late sixties, so it was a real pleasure to sit down with him recently to pen a few words about Peter Gahan the baseballer, the sportsman, the artist, family man and local legend.  I was born in Lismore in 1956, the second son of Michael and Dora Gahan (nee Daly). My older brother Michael and younger siblings Danny, Maryanne and Terry, grew up in the family home in Diadem Street, Lismore.Family life was dominated by sport, with dad an avid cricketer, remembered by numerous local cricketers as being their coach at some point. We also played tennis, squash, baseball and table tennis (on a table he made). He spent many hours teaching young cricketers the basics of the game: watching the ball and choosing the appropriate shot.My three brothers and I didn’t need any coaxing to bat or bowl and there were countless games in the backyard or using the concrete driveway out front, to test each other at every opportunity, with ‘stumps’ only called (and always reluctantly), when mum would call us to the dinner table. Our sister Maryanne played netball, and despite being the only girl in the family, she was absolutely part of the Gahan clan, even though the household had the influence of ‘four boys’. Dad worked for the Public Works as a Clerk of Works and was the primary income earner for our family, while Mum did what mums do and ran the household, without fuss and always with a calm (but firm hand). Once we were older, Mum returned to work on the exchange with Telecom (now called Telstra), but through the growing years, Mum was always there for us, even though we came to understand as we grew older, how little time she had for herself.Mum and Dad somehow managed to raise five kids, giving us a life that was not based on material items but which gave us so much more through the love, care and guidance that they instilled in each of us. Sometimes, it is only later in life that we fully appreciate things that were not apparent as children, and on reflection, our family is no different.Our family of seven, was often joined by friends and relatives, with the household always buzzing with activity. There were regular barbecues in the backyard, with dozens of players from Marist Brothers Cricket Club and baseball teams often gathering at our place after the Saturday games.We loved our time with the extended family and, apart from ‘friendly’ cricket in the park after Xmas lunch, there were many times that Michael and I rode our bikes up to Oakeshott Street to play cricket, baseball or touch with cousins Maurice and Paul and the many young residents of that neighbourhood. The intensity of these games no doubt helped develop the competitive attitude that served us all so well in formal contests, with each of my brothers and several cousins playing representative cricket and baseball at State level. I have come to appreciate, though, that the adults in my life instilled in us the attitude that, while you play hard, it’s only a game and we can all be friends when it’s finished. Diadem Street is situated within the flood zone and I have plenty of vivid memories of floods. I think Mum and Dad always had a plan to find a place out of the immediate reach of flooding. The 1974 flood, which came into the upstairs area of our elevated house and was Lismore’s biggest before the horrendous event of 2022, prompted them to buy a block of land on Donnan’s Road and build a new house for the family. Dad, a chippie by trade, built the house himself, with a lot of help from Danny, a little from me, and the professional skills of his cousins, well-known local brickies, Bernie and Mick Davis. We moved into the new place in 1978.   The family always valued time together and lots of stories and laughs around the dinner table, often joined by friends, saw our time at Diadem Street being a happy place and the move to Donnan’s Road as a worthy reward for our parents, who had sacrificed a lot to raise us.                                            (The Gahan siblings at our home in Diadem Street Lismore about 1968)                                                                                     (Danny, Peter, Terry and Michael about 2000)School days for me started at Our Lady Lourdes at East Lismore, and I had one year at St Carthage's (Year 3), before heading across the road to Marist Brothers, where I graduated from 6th Form (now called year 12), in 1974. I was fortunate to have been part of an amazing group of students, who were not only friends, but individuals who were outstanding people. Tony Bindon went through school with me from kindergarten to 6th Form and also played school rugby league with me. John Maquire, who opened the bowling for Australia, but fell out of favour by going on the Rebel Tour of South Africa, was also a schoolmate of mine. Another schoolmate was Peter O’Neill, who toured England as a member of the Australian Schoolboys team in 1973 and captained the same team a year later in a Test against the touring British Schoolboys team.For a kid from the country and a place where rugby was not a big sport, those selections were one hell of a feat. Peter would go on to become a successful lawyer and like many school friends, inspired me as a person, in so many ways. I have come to understand that our school group was pretty extraordinary, imbued with sound values by our parents and our township, always up for a challenge, willing to listen to one another, to learn, and to be strong physically and mentally. Typically, we would sit around at recess talking about what books we were reading, with ‘The Lord of the Rings’ being a mandatory read by age 13. It was just the way we saw things as a collective group of otherwise ordinary kids. I don’t think it’s a coincidence that sport was a central theme at school and beyond, with several of us having gone on to play sport at high levels. As we grew older (and decades later), I am proud to say that my school friends were each role models (before I even knew what that meant). My love of sports started when I was young, and whether it was cricket in summer, baseball in winter or a range of sports as I grew older, playing (or later coaching), sports has defined my life. Dad loved cricket and the Gahan family has been involved with cricket for as long as I can remember. My late brother Mick achieved the seemingly impossible of a big century (171 not out) and 7 wickets in junior cricket one Saturday morning, and then scoring another century (129) and taking 3 more wickets that afternoon. 300 runs and 10 wickets in a day! Mick’s ability as a baseball catcher is also spoken about in awe, and is one of several Lismore players who might have played professional baseball if such an opportunity had existed in the early ‘70s.                                                  When I was 14, I played reserve-grade cricket under club stalwart Pat Milgate, who was always keen to give young talent a chance. I finished up winning each of the batting and bowling awards that season. It wasn’t until a few years later that I made First Grade and found myself being selected in the Lismore Representative team and ultimately for Far North Coast, North Coast and Country NSW teams. I was frequently captain of these teams. During the World Series Cricket days, Lismore hosted a game between the Australian team and the Cavaliers. This was the last match on the tour, and the WSC Australian team was down to a bare eleven players due to injuries. The late John McMahon, who was, of course, well connected in cricket circles, was contacted to ask if there was a local cricketer who would be ‘up to fielding’ if required and John was gracious enough to nominate me. I would get a huge cheer from the big crowd each time I went onto the field, taking drinks and other needs for players.The wicket at Oakes Oval Lismore, usually very slow, was instead lightning fast. Trevor Chappell toiled to score a tenacious century, but was hit numerous times, and I was told to ‘be ready’ to field (as if I needed the encouragement), in case Trevor could not answer the bell the next day. Unfortunately for me, Trevor had the Chappell toughness and gutted it out, as Australia ran through the Cavaliers batsmen, denying me of my chance at glory. My youngest brother Terry, who had been given the role of clubhouse boy for the Cavaliers team, was gifted the boots of the great South African all-rounder Eddie Barlow. They were terrific cricket boots, and I subsequently borrowed them several times to wear in big games. I also played some rugby league, playing parts of two seasons as lock or in the second-row in First Grade with Marist Brothers, as a 19/20 year-old. Playing against Noel and Les Cleal, who had a stint with Wests in Lismore before the huge, barnstorming duo headed to Sydney, are not fond memories though. One of them ran over the top of me as if I was a speed bump. Although I was relatively slight, I prided myself in having a good tackling technique and being very fit. Although it didn’t help that day, Marist Brothers stalwart Barry Harmon was tallying tackles and had me making 60 tackles in that game, with second-row partner Tommy Sivewright making about 40. Sounds like our team, we didn’t have much of the ball that day. I had a few sporting detours, and in my later teenage years. I tried rowing surf boats, with Max Sidney, who was a legendary sweep at that time, guiding our boat at the Lismore Ballina Surf Club. I also worked my way through the coloured belts in Tae Kwon Do, as did my brother Danny, who reached 2nd Dan black belt. Although not the most practical style in serious combat, Tae Kwon Do helped to greatly improve my coordination and athleticism. I became very flexible, developed better hip function and agility, and substantially improved my mental strength and discipline, all of which helped enormously as I became more serious about sport generally. As my life evolved, I was always looking for ways to explore new challenges, and even though sport has been a massive influence, I actually did other things, that were not centred on sport. I am a qualified primary school teacher, having graduated from the Northern Rivers College of Advanced Education (now Southern Cross University), and I was a full-time teacher for nine years, working at schools including at Casino, Ballina and my own primary school of St Carthages, Lismore.My other employment outside of sport, was five years working with AMP, firstly as a Training Officer and then moving into a management role in Brisbane sales units. I also enjoy painting the odd portrait and while I cannot play a guitar or sing anywhere near as well as my brother Terry, the music of choice for the Gahan family has always been from the albums of Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen and a vintage of genius songwriters whose works have stood the test of time. Baseball is, however, the sport that has resonated with me more than others.I started throwing a baseball as an 8-year-old, and after being selected to represent Queensland, I made it to the U14 National team in 1970. I progressed through the older age groups and again won selection in the U17 Australian team in 1973. I have been involved, as either a player or coach, ever since. My favoured position is catcher, but I was also selected in various years as a pitcher, 3rd Baseman and 2nd baseman for Queensland Claxton Shield teams for the Australian championship. I played for Australia from 1979 to 1983, mostly at 3rd base, but also filled in at times as pitcher, catcher, 2nd base, and outfield.My domestic career was mainly with Queensland, between 1979-87 where I played in the National Claxton Shield competition, including Queensland’s first Championship victory in 1982. I also played one year with NSW in 1983. This was the year that I went to Belgium with my then-girlfriend and now wife of 39½ years, Susan.                              (Collage of photos playing baseball for Marist Brothers at Albert Park Lismore) I have been fortunate to have many ‘sliding door moments’ and being awarded the North Coast Sportsperson of the Year in 1982 was one of the biggest of such moments. The prize for that award was 2 tickets to London with Singapore Airlines and, as luck would have it through baseball, the representative for the airline was Pat Fitzgerald, a former North Lismore boy who made sure we got maximum value out of the prize. Susan lived in Wollongong at that time and I was playing for NSW and living in Sydney. Susan and I were introduced at a party through a baseball connection and as they say, ‘the rest is history’. We would head to Europe, where in 1983, we eventually ended up (deliberately) in Belgium, where I played with a club, Antwerp Eagles, that had been in the league for 60 years and had never won the title. Although I had at times wondered what I was getting myself into, we turned out to have a very good team and had the title sewn up well before the season was completed. I was 27 at the time and had perhaps my best season ever. I pitched well, played solid defence and went very well with the bat, setting records for home runs and batting average. I also made many contacts in European baseball that finished up opening more doors.   Claxton Shield success with Queensland, on this occasion as a coach. Susan and I returned to Lismore in 1984, and were married in December of that year in Byron Bay. We have two children: Courtney (now 37) and Caleb (34). Both are very active and played a number of sports growing up in Brisbane. They both played for their respective National (Team) Handball teams and currently live in Europe as a result.Courtney is a freelance writer and editor who has had long-term contracts with the European Handball Federation and the International Handball Federation, traveling the globe to report on the many events conducted by this major international sport. She also edits PhD theses, particularly for candidates with less than perfect English. Caleb still plays for the National team and is currently in London pursuing PhD studies in elite sport. During my time in Lismore baseball, which included several years when we were living in Brisbane, Lismore remained home base and I played in nine winning A-grade premiership teams for Brothers.We had very strong teams over that time, filled with Gahans, Youngberrys, Buckleys and Egans (as well as a couple of ring-ins). The standard of the local competition was very high, as it had only four teams in the top league, which kept the talent pool concentrated. Numerous players represented Queensland and Australia while playing in Lismore. During my career, it was dominated by Brothers and Workers, with the fearsome Adrian Meagher Jnr on the mound. There are too many wonderful players to mention, but I treasured the opportunity to play with Ray Buckley for many years, a true gentleman and a great athlete. I started coaching juniors during this period, being smart enough to make sure that, as much as possible, I had players with good genes. Three players from one team I coached (Matt Buckley, Matt Gahan and Crag Egan) played professionally in the US. Matt Buckley was in the Australian youth squad I coached in 1990 (see picture below). Away from Lismore, I won three premierships with Brisbane Wests (coached by Greg Wade, himself a former national player) and one with Windsor Royals, coached by Ray’s eldest son, Mark Buckley. My baseball career with the Australian team, extended over five years (1979-83), taking me to countries including USA, Japan, Chinese Tapai, Canada and South Korea. I am proud to have represented the National team for about 70-plus games as a player.Whilst my favoured positions were playing in the infield, I actually started at the National level as an outfielder, but after moving into the infield, I was selected for every successive National team and was never replaced until my last game in my last series. I never played baseball professionally and every team I ever played against was made up of amateur league players, which is not to say that many of them could not have played professionally. The Cuban team, for example, were all serving “in the Army” when I played against them. They had many fine athletes, and their role was to keep the population entertained by playing in their domestic league, which consisted of 6 teams each playing 180 games a year. This is even more than Major League, which plays a regular season consisting of 162 games.  I started coaching baseball locally in 1974 and became involved with National junior programs around 1990. When in Europe, I met Chet Gray while he was coaching the Swedish National team. Chet became the Australian National Director of Coaching for Australian baseball in the mid-80s and we reconnected while I was completing a Level 2 accreditation in Canberra.I stayed involved in junior national programs, firstly with development programs but then with National teams in World Championship events. I had two years as the Manager (head coach) and two years as the Pitching Coach of the U19 team, and then minor roles with National senior teams, including Australia’s Gold Medal win in the 1999 Intercontinental Cup. 1994-2008 saw me employed by the QLD Academy of Sport, firstly running the baseball program, and then as a Sports Program Manager, overseeing eight sports, for two years. The tennis program (one of “mine”) at the time included a couple of players named Sam Stosur and Bernard Tomic. While with the QAS, from 2001 to 2015, I was also coaching in and then administering the Major League Baseball Australian Academy Program (MLBAAP), an eight-week residential program on the Gold Coast for 60-80 of the best teenage players in Australia. It was at the first of these that I became friends with the great Karl Keuhl, who had been in charge of Player Development for several Major League organisations. He became a mentor of mine and arranged for me to take a position as a scout with the Cleveland Indians (now Guardians). I would travel to Florida for two or three weeks each year as the Indians players prepared for their season. In 2008, this blossomed into a full-time role with the Indians, split between scouting in Australia and Europe and coaching in the US. My annual routine started with scouting the Australian Junior Nationals in January, then heading to Florida for Major League Spring training to throw batting practice to the big leaguers and help out with their preparation. When they left camp to commence the season, I would coach the rookie catchers in Extended Spring Training before heading back to Australia in June to the MLBAAP. When that was finished, I would fly to Europe for the MLB European Academy and then drive and scout around Germany, the Czech Republic, Italy, France, Belgium and the Netherlands. After that, I would come home to do follow-up and preparatory scouting in Australia before starting again in January. I was working with teenage aspirants in Australia and Europe, with the newly signed rookies in the US, with players at all levels of Minor League Baseball, and with Major Leaguers on multi-million dollar contracts. It gave me a perspective that is possibly unique. I had previously been involved with high-quality sporting activity, but being able to see how one of the world’s very best professional sporting organisations operates was an experience that greatly enhanced my understanding of the development process. Following the 2008 Global Financial Crisis, however, circumstances took a turn for the worse. The Indians lost $US20 million in 2009 and 2010, and the need for austerity meant that they relegated me to a part-time role. They continued to treat me very well, keeping me in the loop and taking me over for scouting meetings annually. When they made the World Series in 2016, they flew me plus one (Susan was otherwise committed so our son, Caleb, came with me) to watch it. They made the playoffs for the next two years and 2018, again flying me plus one over to watch - our daughter, Courtney, in 2017 and Susan, at last, in 2018.  From 2010 through 2015 I worked for Baseball Australia, firstly as the National Manager of Coach Development and then with the addition of Officials Development. Due to funding cuts and disagreements on direction, I was let go from that role at the beginning of 2016. Through 2016, I worked various part-time roles coaching baseball and cricket, before taking up a Coach Development Manager’s role with the Northern Territory Institute of Sport at the beginning of 2017.This was a role aimed at helping club coaches across all sports to make the role more interesting and functional for them and their charges. It was exactly suited to my philosophy at the time, as I had become, and remain, a firm believer that the emphasis on elite sport is all wrong. Sport should be something you do, not something you just watch. I enjoyed it immensely and established a good working relationship with a range of good people throughout the Territory, all of whom were coaches in sports other than baseball. The uncertainty and travel restrictions surrounding the COVID crisis ultimately led to me feeling that I could no longer remain in the NT, and I retired in 2021. Back in Brisbane, I once again did some part-time and volunteer work coaching baseball and cricket, before Susan and I finally returned to Ballina and closer to our roots (Susan was born in Kyogle). The journey as a baseball coach continues today. I am the Marist Brothers Club Coach this season. I have always enjoyed the challenges that baseball brings. There are many layers to the game, and I firmly believe that it is, above all, an excellent vehicle for personal development. At its most basic level, it is about a pitcher throwing a ball to a batter standing about 60 feet away and the batter trying to hit the ball. But with each player having a specific purpose and needing a specific set of skills, it can be a simple, purely athletic contest, or a cerebral chess match.Strategy sometimes needs to subtly change with every few pitches, and sometimes remains as basic as throw hard, hit hard, run hard. At the highest levels, it requires a range of skills, mental toughness, the capacity to adjust and physical attributes of coordination and speed. And yet, at a community level, it can be played by those with little athletic talent and those with substantial disability. Baseball continues to provide opportunities, even when I am not looking for them. Experience counts for a lot and I am often asked to provide input or to have a role in coach and player development, given my many years in the game. While the sport is not as high profile as football codes in Australia, the baseball community is very tight-knit and there have been some outstanding players and administrators in the sport, who are recognised internationally.The baseball facilities at Albert Park in Lismore are brilliant, and Lismore is a destination now known around the baseball world as a consequence of the successful lobbying for investment and decades of planning, vision, toil and commitment of people, most notably Bill O’Sullivan. Like all community sporting organisations, there are also the people behind the scenes doing the hard yards and Far North Coast Baseball has individuals like Rod Green, who spends countless hours at Albert Park working tirelessly, behind the scenes so that baseball can exist within an environment that is the envy of many regions and cities globally. Baseball has taken me around the world, and while Susan and I now live a quiet life in Ballina, I still spend plenty of time ‘living and breathing’ baseball.Growing up in Lismore provided everything that I ever needed during those early years. I have certainly travelled a few miles since and seen plenty of sights, and that cannot help but change a person. My overwhelming feeling at this stage of my life is one of gratitude. I hesitate to specify what it is I feel most grateful for, and I feel sure that, at 67, the feeling that I am imbued with every day is just that, gratitude. I know I have been very lucky, to have grown up where I did, in the family I did, and among the people I did. 

SUNDAY PROFILE: Stan Gilchrist "cricket is in our blood"
SUNDAY PROFILE: Stan Gilchrist "cricket is in our blood"

18 May 2024, 8:00 PM

This week marks a poignant moment in Lismore's history, as it is the departure of Stan and June Gilchrist from our city.The Gilchrist's have left an indelible mark in Lismore, through cricket and through the fantastic work of Lord's Taverners and The Gilchrist Foundation, two charities that have changed people's lives.My wife (Donna) and I, first met Stan and June at a Lord's Taverners fundraising event at the South Lismore Bowling Club. Along with our daughter, we went along for a bit of fun and to help support a very worthy cause. My bowling partner for the night was Stan, while June, partnered Donna and Callie.We have stayed in touch and met on many occasions to help with both charities.You may not have read Stan's Sunday Profile, which appeared in the early days of the Lismore App (2020) written by our first journalist Will Jackson. It is a great story from one of life's real gentlemen.  Stan Gilchrist, father of Lismore’s most famous cricketing export Adam Gilchrist, lived in a tent until he was about ten years old. Stan’s father was a rabbit trapper and they used to move from place to place on the Western plains near the Queensland-NSW border around the Mungindi and Dirranbandi area.He still clearly remembers going to his first cricket match: The family all piling into the old truck with his father dressed unusually in white shorts and shirt. Driving for what seemed like ages on to a clay pan where a little Ferguson tractor was levelling the ground. A Coir mat had been rolled out for the pitch."I'd never seen cricket before,” Stan said. "I saw my dad run up and do this funny bowling action, the ball hit the pitch and bounced up, hit the bloke in the nose and he was bleeding. From then on my dad used to say we had cricket in the blood.”Stan, now 76, was hooked from the first over. Interviewed at his Goonellabah home with wife June this week, he struggled to explain exactly what he loves about the game, comparing it to loving art or music. But it’s a passion that’s remained a constant in his life and one that he passed on to his children and grandchildren.  Stan with his father who instilled a love of cricket in the young boy. PHOTO: Supplied/Stan and June Gilchrist.  Not long after that first match, Stan’s parents moved the family to a little village north of Inverell called Bukkulla where they lived until he finished high school."I played cricket all the way through high school and did reasonably well,” he said. "I never had any coaching but I read a hell of a lot of books on how to play and I've still got them although I've given one or two to my grandkids because they were a bit interested.”Stan moved to Sydney after high school to study teaching at the University of NSW. He met June, a Maroubra girl who was also studying teaching, and about 18 months later they got married.The family moved around a lot. Stan started working as a science teacher in 1964 first in Cabramatta then Heathcote, Dorrigo and Junee. He was made an inspector at Deniliquin before finally moving to Lismore in 1984."Moving around was great because everywhere we went we found in each of these country towns another family that had lots of kids, so everyone became like relatives,” said June. "Everywhere we went we made some really good friends; that helps the kids to grow.”In 1989, changes in the education system led Stan to take a redundancy. While June kept teaching, he started up a successful business called Coach Cap supplying uniforms and sports clothing and equipment primarily to schools and sports clubs."I did that for a few years and then got old and got out,” he said modestly.Over the years, Stan continued to contribute and excel as a player, coach and eventually administrator, for which he was given a Medal of the Order of Australia in 2015.These days much of his time is spent on the Northern NSW branch of Lord Taverners which he founded in 2009. The organisation primarily helps disabled and disadvantaged young people through sporting grants, all-abilities programs, camps and scholarships including the Adam Gilchrist Cricket Scholarship."Adam went to England on a scholarship in his Year 12 year at Kadina High School and 14 years ago he said to me: ‘Would you be able to organise a scholarship that replicates what I did?’” said Stan. "And we've sent at least one every year since then.”Stan said he tried to bring an adventurous and even daring spirit to Lord Taverners."Sometimes it's good to let it go and be proactive,” he said. "Take some risks. Be adventurous. If we want a flag, we decide we're going to get it, commit to it, and then chase the money if we need to. If we want to help a kid in a wheelchair by buying a new chair, like we did a couple of years ago... we didn't necessarily have all the funds there in our pocket, but we got it, and we always will.” Stan Gilchrist used to cut young Adam's hair. PHOTO: Supplied/Stan and June Gilchrist.  June and Stan said that it was inevitable their children would get into sports. Stan was a cricket obsessive while June played a variety, but most enjoyed squash and played representative varsity at Sydney University. "It was just natural for them to play around with balls and sticks and whack and throw and all that stuff,” said June. "The boys used to be competitive with each other. They loved throwing and running and kicking. They were very good soccer players as well. This is a great sporting area here and they just got involved in everything. Stan got involved in the cricket so they all played with him in the teams.” All the Gilchrist children played cricket but Adam was the only one to play professionally. Jacki, who was the first woman to play in the Deniliquin B-grade competition, became an occupational therapist. Glenn, was perhaps the most naturally talented of the kids, but didn’t have the commitment to the game and is now the Australian manager for a surgical equipment firm. Dean played first-grade cricket in Sydney and is a coach with St George Cricket Club but also has a company that teaches sports skills to primary-age children.Stan said Adam had the right combination of talent and determination but also the right personality."Adam's a free spirit,” he said. "Richie Benaud says he hits the ball cleaner than any player he's ever seen. He's a very focused person when he wants to be but he has the ability to just turn off as well. So, all of those things are really important in a top sportsman.”Being the youngest may also have contributed, added June."The eldest, the first child, you're always a bit worried about trying to do things right. By the time you get to four, they're just puttering around with the others, and you are more: ‘He'll be right’. There's more freedom in attitude and less taking things seriously,” she said. "Adam does when necessary, he does take his cricket seriously, but he can see it's just a game. He says: ‘Oh I'll have a go’."He knew he could bat, but he really liked to be good at wicketkeeping. He knew it didn’t matter if he got out first ball if he was wicket keeper. If he got out he got out. It freed him up.” Stan and June they said they believed having something the whole family could be involved in was helpful raising their children but it didn’t necessarily have to be cricket, or even sport – it could just as easily have been music or art. The real key was to be connected and encouraging. "We've been really lucky to have four quite different kids who have gone in quite different directions in their lives but all doing really well and they in turn have kids who are doing well,” said Stan.UPDATE 19 MAY 2024Our house in Goonellabah is packed and empty as June and I look forward to the next chapter in our lives. As we get older, our health has declined and our children have moved to other parts of the country. We have two children living in Sydney, so our next stop will be the Central Coast of NSW where it will be less driving for us but closer to children and grandchildren and easier for them to visit.I want to say thank you to Lismore for how good you have been to June and me. We have made a huge amount of friends since we moved to Lismore in 1984, many of whom we will see at our new home.We are so proud to be part of the Lismore community. I hope we have made a positive contribution, as so many others have, to improve the lives of Lismore's talented young people who needed some help to achieve their goals whether it be through academic or sporting endeavours. We always wanted to leave having made people's lives a little better. It warms our hearts to have done that with Lord's Taverners and The Gilchrist Foundation.Lismore is a resilient city, and we will miss it dearly, especially its people, who will remain dear to June and me.

SUNDAY PROFILE: Viviene O'Leary still teaching at 81 years young
SUNDAY PROFILE: Viviene O'Leary still teaching at 81 years young

11 May 2024, 8:01 PM

Viviene O'Leary is still teaching English at Trinity Catholic College. I say still because Viviene is 81 and has been teaching for 56 years, but as you will learn, she still loves what she does. Maive McKenzie sat down with Viviene to get her life story.First and foremost, I didn’t choose to be a teacher and certainly never intended to make a career of it.I attended a top selective high school in Sydney in the 1950s, which followed a rigorous academic curriculum: absolutely no art, music, sewing or cooking! Skills I was sorely in need of in later life!I did receive a first-class education from inspiring teachers, but while I loved the humanities subjects: English, History and languages, I had absolutely no interest and no talent for Maths and Science. I have never been good at doing what I don’t enjoy, and my end-of-school results in Maths and Science were so abysmal that I didn’t get a Commonwealth Scholarship. I was awarded a Secondary Teacher’s Scholarship instead, to Sydney University, (the best years of my life!) where the state paid all university fees, paid a living allowance, but contracted you to teach anywhere in the state for five years or pay it all back. Teaching is and has been my life, and overall, it has brought and continues to bring me joy. This is pretty amazing considering that on a school ‘retreat’ recently I was completely stumped by a journal writing prompt about ‘what brought me joy’. I would never have thought at that moment of using ‘joy’ to describe teaching! But yes, I am proud to say that I am a teacher and yes, my job brings me joy! My joy is twofold: the joy of the kids ‘getting it’ (whatever the ‘it’ of the moment is), not just at the temporal level but at a ‘real’ level when they start to connect the dots: that there is so much in the world that is ‘wrong’; that despite huge technological and scientific advances we are not living the way it must have been intended; that history is cyclical; that there has been an end to civilisation more than once; the truth of Shakespeare’s epigram about duality in the world: fair is foul and foul is fair (‘Macbeth’); that literature is a not-so-pretty mirror of society; to ponder on the numinous when Hamlet says: … there are greater things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than this world dreams of; and to imagine ‘brotherhood’ when Tim Winton says in Cloudstreet: It’s us and us and us. It’s always us...’ (Viviene with Tony Durheim and Trinity Catholic College Principal Jesse Smith. Photo: supplied) The English syllabus would call this ‘developing critical literacy’, but I think of it as having a more soulful dimension than the mere mental process represented in syllabus jargon. I think of it as developing the ability to ‘read’ people and ‘life’ as the result of vicarious experiences in literature. This is, after all, what literature is for: to experience the turmoil of LIFE, in all its extremities, from the safety of an armchair! The second joyful gift of teaching has been that it has enabled me to be the ‘forever student’ and constantly enrich myself with new ideas and realisations. As a teacher, I have been lucky enough to be on a lifetime journey of lifelong learning! At first, this was a bit of a mystery, and it certainly did not come to me immediately, but after years of anxiety and struggle, I found that after I overcame the avoidance and anxiety of tackling some formidable literary analysis, the ideas would just flow out onto the page to the point where I felt ‘I can’t believe I wrote this!’ without realising how true this actually was. I call this the ‘download’! Like most female Arts graduates of my generation, I drifted into teaching for want of a better alternative and never intended to stay longer than the five-year bond. I was going to travel and be a cutting-edge journalist! Along, of course, with meeting Mr Right, living an adventurous, happy, fulfilling life and having a large and happy family (of course). So my first year out of teaching was where my education really began.My first school was Cabramatta High in Western Sydney - co-ed and a pretty wild place in 1965. Immediately, I was confronted by pretty much knowing nothing about what I was supposed to be teaching: English and History.As a privileged scholarship, full-time day student, I had frittered away my ‘study’ years, ‘partying’ and non-attendance at lectures, so it came as quite a shock to be confronted with what I was supposed ‘to know’ and transform into lesson plans – so ahead was a very steep learning curve indeed.Unexpectedly, I found I liked the kids – probably because I was a typical ‘sixties’ person and was 20 when I started teaching – there was a boy in my Year 12 class who was older than I was! I discovered I loved learning and that it was so INTERESTING! This precipitated my escape into books and knowledge: an absolute journey of ‘discovery’, which consumed the intervening years, along with 2 marriages, 2 divorces and 5 children, which brings me to the present: aged 81 – teaching in state and Catholic high schools, for the last 56 years.In my first couple of years of teaching I had to work incredibly hard to plug this gap. I found I liked kids, liked the job and was good at it when I was ‘prepared’. In 1968 I got married and moved to Mackellar Girls’ High School at Manly Vale and continued striving to achieve ‘academic excellence’. I had mostly senior classes, but I do remember a Year 8 English class, where students fought over whose turn it was to read Shylock in ‘The Merchant of Venice’ - something Year 12 balk at now!I left teaching to have my first child and found I did not enjoy the drudgery of being a mother and housewife. I pined for intellectual stimulation and buried myself in books, which became my reality and something to cope with in between books. I also did an acting course with the Marion St. Theatre and got the Trinity College Speech and Drama qualification, and with a friend, started a local drama group for kids that was very successful. When my second child was twelve months old, I returned to teaching in 1974 as a part-time Drama teacher at Stella Maris College Manly. Again, this was a steep learning curve because, at this time, there was no Drama syllabus, and I spent the next few years doing as many acting and theatre courses as I could manage and writing my own programmes along the way.This is where my ‘download’ for teaching really happened because I had to come from my heart and I could see what an amazing vehicle for personal growth drama was for kids and I just sort of followed my nose. When I look back on the ‘drama excellence’ of Trinity, I realise how absolutely amazing those kids were and how amazing the performances we did were because I can see that my lack of knowledge meant that I didn’t impose on them. Also, I have to put in a plug for the family values of the good old Catholic education system here: still at Stella when my fifth child was born very prematurely. I returned to teaching drama with him strapped on my chest in a koala pouch in the mornings; after lunch he slept in a portable cot in a corner of the drama room and woke up on cue at 3.30 when the bell went! That would NEVER happen in a state school!I did operate, however, from a place of nervous energy and anxiety because I had no idea really what I was doing but was positioned by the school as the resident ‘expert’. My husband was a Sydney Symphony Orchestra musician who was mostly absent at night, at concerts and this gave me the necessary breathing space to prepare lessons.Slowly, glimmerings filtered through. I thought about the old nun at my first Catholic school, who told me, when she employed me: Every time I place my hand on the doorknob of a classroom, I remind myself I am there to teach the students, not the curriculum. Recalling this twenty-five years later was revolutionary: really? You mean imparting knowledge and achieving top results is not the main event? Gradually, it seeped through that being myself, divorcing myself from the authoritarian role of ‘being the teacher’ and treating them as equals worked a lot better for both of us. It did not exhaust me, and it didn’t antagonise them: ‘because I am telling you’ became ‘because I’m asking you to trust me’ to ‘well, I’ll leave it up to you; it’s your choice.’ I could feel that they didn’t always want to cooperate and sometimes didn’t, but that they respected me, that we laughed a lot more, and things were easier.    In retrospect, it is the joy that predominates when I reflect on continuing to teach into my eighties. You never know who you might have sitting in front of you or what effect you might have on them. I have a litany of such moments. I recount them here, not to glorify myself as an individual, but to highlight the difference it is possible to make to the daily reality of the individual captives of a harsh system. Every teacher who is in service would have an equal number of such moments. I think of the boy who sat in the back corner for two years, largely in silence, emanating hostility and disapproval, a dedicated Ancient History student, whose father was a university professor. He argued relentlessly and passionately with pretty much everything I said. He made me very nervous. I thought he hated me. He wanted to join the army. At the end of the HSC, he gave me a beautiful letter, which began, ‘Thank you for being my Penelope and weaving such a fascinating tapestry… ‘ and I was gobsmacked. I think of the Extension 2 student, whose teacher asked me to edit her major work because ‘it is doing my head in’. She asked me to ‘see what can possibly be done with this’ because the student ‘refused to change anything’.We had been studying the grim, dystopian novel, 1984 by George Orwell. Her story was set in a world of disconnection, distrust and emptiness, where the main character made a random connection on a ‘traffic island’ with a girl, who ‘grew into her fullness’ as their intimacy grew, but disappeared one day after a ‘plain brown paper box tied up with string’ was left on her doorstep by persons unknown. As he works through his grief, the boy starts to see the world is just ‘a reflection of shadows’ and not real. It is implied in a very understated way that as a result of this ‘painful awakening’ he is beginning to ‘grow into his fullness’, until one day he comes home and finds on his doorstep, ‘a brown paper box tied up with string’ …end of story.All the way through the reader is positioned to regard ‘the brown paper box’ as an instrument of tyranny and the ‘disappearance’ in the context of terror, but by the end of the story, the writer has embedded enough beams of light, so that when the boy discovers the brown paper box on his doorstep, he is delighted and we feel strangely uplifted. I was stunned at the implications. When I asked the student whether she had been influenced in writing the story by 1984‘, she looked puzzled and replied, ‘What do you mean? I just had this image of a brown paper box, tied up with string’ and I wanted to write a story about it.’When I asked her what was in the brown paper box, she said, ’I don’t know. It’s a mystery. Only the person knows.’ This major work received full marks in Extension 2 at the HSC. I think this is the ‘Download’ at work. I think of the student, who slogged away at essay writing but never achieved more than a mediocre mark. When I asked her if she was disappointed with her HSC result she said, ‘Not at all. I loved it. It’s like you’re this incredible storyteller and I just get so caught up in the story, it’s like magic…I was just never able to put that in an essay.’ And the year 12 student who came back to see me after the HSC, who came into my new Year 12 class and asked if she could sit in, because she wanted to remember what it was like. I felt awkward and asked her to talk to the class about what they needed to do, on the basis of her experience, to get the outcome they wanted at the end of the year: she took over the rest of the lesson, wrote all over the whiteboard and told them to write down every word I said because if they asked me to repeat it, I wouldn’t be able to!She was amazing, and they were in awe. From time to time, they still reference pieces of advice she gave them, and the murmur runs through the class: Emily said… I received a postcard from a many years ago ex-student who, standing in front of a painting of ‘Electra’ in an art gallery in Florence, said ‘the hairs on the back of her neck stood up’ as she recalled the lines she had spoken as Cassandra in our performance of Greek tragedy. As I read the postcard, I could visualise the same moment and smile. I think of the student in my Year 12 class a few years ago, an ultimate physical and psychological misfit in the system and an anathema to the entire staff. He was into conspiracy theories and rarely on task. He was great at hijacking the lesson and disagreeing with everything. He exasperated the class and remained a solitary figure. Often he would make comments that the rest of the class didn’t understand but were very perceptive. Very slowly, he became more cooperative, but he never completed class tasks and had to receive multiple warning letters before he would do assessment tasks.At the end of the course, Year 12 students can nominate a few teachers from whom they would like to receive a letter, as a sort of ‘snapshot of our time together’. Again, it is very surprising to see who does and does not request a letter from you! Despite his not requesting a letter from me, as I gave out my letters, I handed him one, with a small crystal star inside a card urging him to ‘hang it up somewhere in the light so it would reflect back to him who he really was.’ He came to see me later with shining eyes, to say, ‘Thank you. It was a beautiful present.’ Again, this gesture did not come from me, because he tried my patience sorely: the ‘Download’!Finally, of course, I should mention also that I taught our esteemed principal, the amazing Jesse Smith, in Years 11 and 12 and am so proud of the fact that all these years later, he can still quote verbatim from ‘The Great Gatsby’, ‘Cloudstreet’, ‘The Tempest’ etc. A Renaissance Man! Those are the glorious moments, but there is much about the current state of the teaching profession that is of concern. The whole system is propped up by teachers’ commitment to professional best practice and their goodwill to constantly go the extra mile for their students. As an ‘older teacher’, I find the increasing ‘technologicalisation’ of education intimidating and alarming. I am critical of the increased dependency on ‘electronic learning’, which, although an invaluable resource to ‘bring education alive’, it is fraught with gimmicks and games that can become an end in themselves and eat up time, limiting opportunities for active engagement and practice of skills.Gradually I have acquired the basics, but the goal I set myself every year is that I will become proficient in the use of the technological systems within the school and be able to use relevant teaching resources without the accompanying anxiety and stress. Still a work in progress. Artificial Intelligence is now the latest challenge to education remaining a meaningful learning experience as a pathway to professional competence and personal wisdom. Who knows where that will take us?  The HSC year is a marathon, involving stress: juggling time management, anxiety and exhaustion. Saddest of all is the inquisitive, imaginative, high-achieving student who tells you after the ‘recipe-driven’ experience of literature post-HSC: I never want to read another book. I’m never going to write anything again. Along the way, I have to say I have suffered several periods of disillusionment, cynicism and burnout when it is so easy to sink into ‘giving up energy’ and blame ‘the system’. After one such protracted period of stagnation, I decided, yet again, that sadly, retirement was the only option. I had witnessed much younger colleagues resign because they ‘just couldn’t do it anymore’ and concluded that it must be time to go. If the body is exhausted and telling you it has reached its limit, surely you need to pay attention to the body and take measures that allow it the space to regain its vitality. What I needed was a strategy to get myself out of the momentum of ‘giving –up’. I embarked on a fitness regime at the gym and a lifestyle review. From this, I recognised the truth of listening to your body and that age does not disqualify you from being productive, energetic, enthusiastic and successful in the workplace. I learnt the wisdom of eliminating physical causes, before writing yourself off as being too old. I have found mentoring young teachers a mutually enriching process. I feel confident, from the heart-felt feedback they give, that they have benefitted from my experience, and I have learnt a great deal from them. Having regained my energy and vigour, however, via my new health regime and having revised my teaching philosophy, I am confident that presently I enjoy the respect and, in some measure, the admiration of my colleagues. Many of them tell me I am ‘amazing’ and ‘an inspiration’. Having originally come for a year in 2000, I have been at Trinity for 25 years this year, and I am still en-joy-ing my job! Teaching is a hard job. Both the system and the ‘pack mentality’ are brutal, but nevertheless, it is the joy that remains with me, a blessing punctuated by fairly constant frustration and exhaustion, but joyful still.On the last day of term this year, as we trudged down to the lunch provided by the principal, after an exhausting morning of analysing HSC results, a colleague said to me in tones of sour sarcasm, ‘Well Viv, where would you rather be?’ I surprised both her and myself by saying, ‘Well, actually, I’m quite happy to be here, in my job and in my life. I feel blessed.’

SUNDAY PROFILE: Warwick Binney a 5th generation Lismore resident
SUNDAY PROFILE: Warwick Binney a 5th generation Lismore resident

04 May 2024, 7:21 PM

The Binney name is one of those long-standing surnames in Lismore. Warwick is 5th generation. He was born in Lismore, went to school in Goonellabah, worked in the family construction business before starting his own funeral business. The Binney name lives on through his children. Lilly Harmon sat down and learnt about Warwick's life.I was born in Lismore and have lived here for my entire life since, except for a very brief period when I was four years old.I spent my whole schooling in the Goonellabah area starting with Goonellabah Public for primary school and then Kadina for high school. Back in my day, it was very typical for people to leave high school in year 10 and go straight into the workforce or to TAFE. I left in 1985, and at the beginning of 1986, I began my apprenticeship in the building industry, which lasted for four years with one practical year. I worked in our family business run by my father and mother, Rosney Constructions, not only throughout that period, but I ended up working there for 31 years. I was always surrounded by building and construction as a child through my family, so it just seemed like a natural progression for me to join my parents in the building industry with them.Throughout my early life. if there was work to be done or bricks to be shifted, everyone I carried was one less that Dad didn't have to. It was just part of life.Family businesses are an interesting thing. I've had a lot of friends that I've grown up with who have tried working in family businesses, but it just wasn't for them. It's definitely been a huge plus for me working for my family throughout my whole life. The connections I've got with them in both our professional working and family relationships, while they are separate, have just been absolute blessings. I love that I worked for Mum and Dad for such a long period of my life, and then having them come and work for me later on in my career path is just amazing. We’ve supported each other at every step of the way.During 1994, our joinery works at that business started manufacturing coffins for the funeral industry, which was the starting point for this sort of cross-pollination into the funeral industry from building through coffin manufacturing.We were very heavily involved in that period of time with the National Funeral Directors Association from here in Lismore and also with the Funeral Directors of New South Wales. I was continually at their meetings and had a lot of correspondence with them regarding coffins, and it invoked a real interest in me regarding the behind-the-scenes aspects of what a funeral involves. You never get to see what happens behind closed doors at funerals and this work made me realise how much work and organisation goes on in all aspects of the process from the start to the finish. From about 2005, I began training, which would eventually prepare me to open my own funeral home, being fully trained in the funeral industry. At the end of 2014, we made the decision to sell our coffin manufacturing business and we wound up the building construction side as well. After about a 12 month period full of organisation and paperwork, I was able to open our funeral home here in Lismore at the beginning of 2016. There were a large number of other funeral homes in the area, so it was a very risky and brave decision by us to bring a service into a community that is already being well served. We jumped in hoping that our Lismore local community would back us, considering that we’re a family that has been well established in the area for 5 generations with many connections and understandings of the needs of locals. In its essence, Lismore is just a big country town where people still want a local funeral director. Often people do come to me knowing me and my family, entrusting that someone local is there to support their loved one and themselves through a very difficult time. We had a bit of a role reversal, as it was Mum and Dad's business that I originally worked for, but now this was my business and they kind of worked for me. My mother, father and I basically did 94% of everything in our business until Dad passed away back in 2022. Mum continues on here with me along with Liz, and they’re a great help here at the home helping me keep everything running smoothly. Putting aside my own working life, I do have a family of my own. I have three sons, Nelson, Jakeb, and Harry all working in different fields. One is in agribusiness, specifically avocados, but in more marketing distribution of avocados through markets, supermarkets and international areas. One son is a high school maths teacher in Tamworth, and my youngest son has his own business as an electrician here locally as well. It's good having him here locally.All of the kids through either their time at university or school or what have you, all worked here on a casual basis at times. They've all got different areas of the funeral industry that they're comfortable with and other areas that aren't for them, but none saw it as a true vocational path. In regards to what I actually do at the business, I pretty much do every part of the funeral process. I do most of the arranging of funerals with families and meeting to talk to them about what their needs are at that difficult time. I'm guiding them through the education of things that they can do and things that they could consider doing for the funeral of their loved one so that they can make an informed decision about what their needs are for a funeral service. It’s not dictated by me.I then work through the entire process from transfers and any mortuary preparations through to conducting the service. We do all of our in house multimedia presentations, print media, pamphlets, bookmarks as well as live streaming. It's been great having Liz come on board with her abilities in that sort of stuff with more newer media We have about 150 funerals per annum, so that's rounded out to three funerals a week. But that’s not definite, I can't really say because there's no predictability in this industry. Back when I was 16 in year 10, if someone had said to me, “I've got a job for you in the funeral industry” I’d shake my head and run a million miles away. I think that working in the funeral industry is something that you need a certain level of life experience before you can jump into it. I do definitely think it's an industry that you've probably called to, not an industry that you select.It's an absolute privilege to work doing what I'm doing, and with families to trust their most prized possessions and loved ones to you and to become part of that family, on that journey with them. It really is a wholesome career path, but from my experiences, it's a life choice, not a career choice.

SUNDAY PROFILE: Paul Jones - his steelworks left an indelible mark on Lismore
SUNDAY PROFILE: Paul Jones - his steelworks left an indelible mark on Lismore

27 April 2024, 8:00 PM

Paul Jones is a name synonymous with Lismore and its long history. Paul helped create some iconic Lismore landmarks, leaving his mark all over our city. Maive McKenzie spoke with Paul's wife, Dorothea Jones, his sons Richard and Paul Jr, Denise Woodward, secretary from 1964 to 2007 and Max Graham, apprentice to the foreman, before writing this Sunday Profile about Paul's life.The lasting legacy of Paul Jones is proudly situated in the heart of Lismore, amid a chorus of clinking steel and the steady hum of heavy machinery. Paul was raised in humble beginnings, and his tale is deeply entwined with the story of a family business that has endured over many generations and through the ages.Paul's family history in the steel industry goes back a very long way. Moving from Paddington Sydney to the quaint and quiet town of Lismore (as it was in the 1940s) at the age of thirteen, Paul learned from his father, a skilled blacksmith, who prepared the foundation for their family's entry into the steel fabrication industry. As the 1950s loomed on the horizon, an opportune moment presented itself to Paul's father to pivot their trade in alignment with the evolving industrial landscape. Embracing the wave of automation sweeping through the sector, they undertook a transformative journey into the realms of engineering and metal fabrication, adeptly catering to the growing transport industry.(Paul Jones, second from left, in the early 1950s)In the transformative year of 1959, at a critical juncture, Paul took over the family's business. Seizing the reins, he orchestrated the acquisition of the existing steelworks, infusing it with a renewed vigour that radiated throughout the rebranded establishment known henceforth as the influential Paul Jones Steelworks. Driven by an entrepreneurial spirit, Paul took the business to new heights and made it one of the three steel fabrication companies in the thriving Lismore region. In those early years, the furnace roared with the heat of creation, shaping not just steel but the character of those who toiled within its glow. Long hours were spent repairing springs for buses, a testament to the unwavering dedication of the craftsmen who kept the wheels of industry turning. The furnace was described as large and hot, like Hades in a room. Paul's steelworks became a landmark in the industrial landscape thanks to his unwavering dedication to excellence and his passion for innovative projects. Many of the tradesmen in town did their apprenticeship in his workshop. Paul went on to expand the business by purchasing Max Engineering. He would inspire his apprentices, pushing them to ‘keep it simple, keep it strong’ and go on to have their own businesses down the line and to always ‘have a go!’ Jones' workshop was a sight to behold, filled with colossal machines that seemed to have come straight out of the industrial revolution. Despite the initial intimidation factor, his workshop soon became a cornerstone of construction in Lismore. It was here that Jones and his dedicated team worked tirelessly to craft some of the most important buildings in the area. Notable among their projects were the renowned Richmond River High School, which stands as a testament to their skill and craftsmanship. However, perhaps their most celebrated achievement was the construction of the iconic Lismore roller rink in 1977-78. This beloved venue quickly became a cherished part of Lismore's social scene, attracting skaters and spectators alike with its charm and character. Jones' legacy as a master builder lives on in these structures, each standing as a testament to his unwavering commitment to quality and innovation.(Richmond River High School - one of Paul Jones' many building legacies in Lismore)Paul's absolute dedication to achieving excellence and his burning enthusiasm for spearheading innovative projects played a significant role in elevating his steelworks to become a cornerstone of the community during the thriving era of Lismore. Working hard for Lismore, his loving wife and seven kids who loved to muck around. Over the passing decades, Paul's steelworks evolved beyond being merely a place of commerce; it emerged as a potent emblem of pride for the entire neighbourhood. From the looming structures to the meticulous details adorning each steel creation, Paul's distinctive touch could be spotted in every corner. The steelworks didn't just symbolise economic prosperity but also embodied the spirit of the people of Lismore.However, the impact of Paul's contributions went far beyond just the physical structures or the level of skill and expertise involved in creating them. It extended to the very heart of the community itself, reaching into the lives of the individuals who depended on the steelworks or his fixing of farmer’s equipment, the young minds who found inspiration within the walls of the educational establishments he played a part in establishing, and even the apprentices who were inspired and pushed to go further. It was a network of interconnected relationships and dependencies, woven together by Paul's vision and generosity, all working in harmony to create a stronger, more vibrant community for everyone involved.Throughout every challenge he faced, Paul stood firm in his dedication to delivering top-notch quality. His enthusiasm only grew stronger as time went on, motivating him to constantly explore new horizons and strive for excellence. Simply meeting the standards was never sufficient for Paul; he thrived on surpassing them repeatedly, setting a high bar for himself and consistently raising it.Numerous tradesmen regularly entered the bustling workshop, with up to ten workers present at any given time, making it a lively and productive space. In the midst of the constant commotion, stood Garner Ball, a true representation of traditional craftsmanship. He was known for his unwavering reliability and solid work ethic, serving as the cornerstone of the workshop and a quiet yet formidable presence amidst the noisy machinery.During the vibrant eras of Lismore, which spanned from the groovy 1960s up to the colourful 1980s, Paul's business flourished in the midst of a vibrant and bustling community on the rise. As the only blacksmith in town, Paul's workshop was a hub of constant activity, catering to both farmers tending to the land and skilled craftsmen honing their trades. Whether it was sharpening trusty crowbars for hardworking labourers or meticulously repairing essential farming equipment, Paul's impeccable craftsmanship stood as a steadfast pillar of the local economy, earning him a reputation as the go-to artisan for all things metalworking-related in the area. His dedication to his craft and unwavering commitment to quality not only sustained his business but also played a crucial role in nurturing the thriving spirit of the growing community that relied on his expertise.Paul's first big break into steel fabrication was in the early 1970s when he built the Summerland Drive-In Screen at Wollongbar. He went on to build eight (8) more in NSW and Queensland for Birch Carol and Coyle.(The completed Summerland Drive-In Cinema in the early 1970s)The bond that existed between Paul and his customers went far beyond simple transactions. It blossomed into a mutually beneficial relationship grounded in trust and genuine respect. In a heartwarming display of camaraderie, farmers would settle their debts by providing Paul with fresh produce, underscoring the deep-seated connection between artisans and their loyal clientele. This exchange not only symbolised gratitude but also underscored the enduring nature of the bond forged through years of shared experiences and unwavering support.Through perseverance and dedication, Paul's business successfully navigated through various challenges and emerged stronger than ever. Clients trusted his services due to his unwavering commitment to reliability and exceptional quality. With a bold leap into construction projects, Paul not only expanded his business but also transformed the very essence of Lismore's landscape. From the precision of building tie rods to the grandeur of constructing iconic landmarks, Paul's influence became deeply ingrained in the architectural tapestry of the Lismore. Paul made the decision to retire in 1993, passing the torch to his son Philip, who took over the family business. Although officially retired, Paul couldn't stay away for long. He continued to lend a helping hand until health issues forced Philip to sell the business to the Hecktle family in 2007 who remained in the building until the 2022 big flood.As a wave of memories washes over, the focus gravitates towards the relics of yesteryears. Among them looms the guillotine, a machine that once stood tall and mighty as a proud symbol of industrial prowess but now finds itself gathering dust in the shadows of history. Despite its weathered and worn appearance, the guillotine continues to hold a special place in the hearts of those present, serving as a poignant reminder of Paul's unparalleled craftsmanship and the invaluable lessons he passed down to the succeeding generation. Standing there, surrounded by the echoes of bygone eras, a testament to the enduring power of skilled workmanship and the enduring impact it can have on those who follow in its footsteps.In 2012, the Jones family approached the Lismore Council with a heartfelt proposal. They suggested naming the previously unnamed lane located at the rear of the station hotel, which ran parallel to Casino Street before meeting up with it in South Lismore, after the much-loved Paul Jones. The council members unanimously agreed to honour the request, and thus, the lane was officially named Paul Jones Lane. It was a touching gesture that held deep sentimental value for the Jones family. Councillor Peter Graham shared a personal connection to the decision, revealing that he had actually worked at the workshop himself in his younger days. This added a poignant touch to the naming of the lane, creating a sense of community and nostalgia that resonated with both the council and the local residents.The council's choice to dedicate a street name to Paul Jones serves as a powerful recognition of his significant contributions to the community. This decision showcases the lasting influence he had, particularly evident through the success of his former apprentices, who have now become respected council members. These individuals, having directly experienced Paul Jones' mentorship and guidance, now have the opportunity to pay homage to his impact by immortalising his name on a street within the very community that he helped shape and develop.However, the workshop was not entirely immune to the forces of change that swept through it. Essential implements such as the sturdy anvil mysteriously vanished in the aftermath of the flood, evoking a sense of unease and suspicion among the past craftsmen. Despite the years slipping away like sand through an hourglass, the essence of Paul Jones Steelworks remains alive and well, tucked away in the fond recollections of the individuals who once laboured there and the very street that proudly carries his name. The tales shared serve as a testament to the enduring legacy of craftsmanship and camaraderie that defined an era long past but cherished deeply in the fabric of the community.The workshop burnt down on August 21 2023, and was demolished on March 18 2024. It was approximately 100 years old, so filled with many memories of Lismore's history. It stands on shaky ground, unsure of what lies ahead. Despite this lingering uncertainty, there exists a deep respect for the traditions of yesteryears and a strong will to uphold Paul's enduring legacy so that it may be cherished by many more generations to come. 

SUNDAY PROFILE: Sue Higginson - a lifetime of passion for the environment
SUNDAY PROFILE: Sue Higginson - a lifetime of passion for the environment

20 April 2024, 8:02 PM

Most people don't know what they want to do with their life when they are young, while others have a passion that turns into a career. This is what happened to Sue Higginson. Sue has been passionate about the environment even as a teenager. This has led her to become an environmental activist, a lawyer and now a member of the Legislative Council in the NSW Upper House. Lilly Harmon managed to get some time with Sue to hear her life story.I was born in the south of England in the beautiful region of Cornwall. When I was two, we moved north near Manchester to Preston, the birthplace of the Industrial Revolution.My Dad was a manufacturing guru who subscribed to Thatcher’s Britain. He was from extreme poverty and was determined to work his way out of it. His work and politics were central to our lives.After my birth, my beautiful Mum suffered severe post-natal depression and suffered dramatically for most of the first part of my life. It was a difficult time because mental illness was taboo in those days; it was interpreted as some form of weak infliction.My Dad's ambition brought us to Australia in the early 80s, when I was about 10.We left everything behind and arrived in Melbourne to start our new life. For me it was like being reborn, I think it was for Mum too. The minute I arrived here on this land, I was impacted by how beautiful, big and wild it is.In England, my Dad used to love taking me and my siblings hiking and camping in the countryside, so I had a relationship of sorts with nature. When we arrived in Victoria, one of the first places he took our family was the Dandenongs.I will never forget walking into this place called Sherbrooke Forest. It was just this absolutely unbelievable tall temperate forest environment. It was something I had never ever experienced in my whole life. It was wild, ancient, alive and full of life. I suppose at ten, those kinds of experiences are very long-lasting and make a massive impression on your soul. I don't think I realised at the time that nature and being an environmental activist would be such an integral aspect of my life, and it wasn't a conscious thing at the time, but looking back, it definitely was formative. I realised this later in life when I had to start questioning why I was so passionate about the environment and why I found myself locking myself onto bulldozers ten years later, trying to stop the logging of forests. When I found myself locking onto bulldozers ten years later trying to stop the logging of forests. When I'm trying to really reconcile how that was happening and what was driving me, I look back and reminisce on my experiences in nature; it must have meant something.I remember that first time I walked into that forest, I couldn't believe the utter size and the age of these giant trees. I saw crimson rosellas as well and shining bright rubies flying through the forest. I think it probably took me straight back to my early childhood, and those few happy magic places of adventure and wonder that I held on to, like reading Enid Blyton's Magic Faraway Tree and The Enchanted Forest. I just couldn't believe that forests and land like this was real and it was here, in my new world!I did my high schooling in Melbourne, and I was always quite political. I was part of my school's first Student Representative Council. I was always a news watcher and my Dad was very engaged in politics and the economy, part of my engagement was a way of relating to him.I formed my politics in opposition to his, which was very hard. I think it is so much easier to follow your parent's politics, but I just couldn't.As a young kid in England, my Dad agreed with Margaret Thatcher's vision for Britain; he was fundamentally a capitalist. I couldn't see how anyone could hold the view that the only reason a person is poor is because they don't work hard enough. I could only see Margaret Thatcher as the Iron Lady she became known as, and a mean person who didn't have much compassion for the disadvantaged or sick.In 1983, I remember watching the news and seeing the reporting of the Franklin Dam protest in Tasmania. I grabbed me physically and emotionally. I saw these incredible people putting their lives on the line for the protection of our natural environment. I now look back and think, wow, that was Bob Brown, and essentially the beginning of the Greens. I can't now look back and say, I remember seeing Bob Brown on the TV, I just saw people.I saw a group of deeply passionate, creative, dedicated people who were willing to give up everything to protect something so valuable and important. The arguments, the logic, and the rationale that was being put forward as to why it's so important to protect these incredibly important wild places rather than damage them irreversibly really shaped me. I must have been about 14 at high school, in about year 9. I looked at these people; I saw leaders, carers, and evidenced-based operators as part of a connected movement of real-life heroes.I followed the High Court case around the Franklin where Tasmania took the Commonwealth to court for passing laws that stopped the building of the Franklin Dam. Bob Hawke has made a big deal about protecting the environment. It was an exciting time in Australian political and legal history. It was environmental justice in action and there was a movement of standing up for the country, for our precious environment and for biodiversity.One day at school, I mentioned the Franklin dam to our politics teacher, he very coyly said to me during the lunch break that during the school holidays, he was at the Franklin blockade. A few of my mates and I wanted to know all about it, what he had seen and what it was like.He talked about how exciting, meaningful and important that work was. It made me realise that it really is just a group of amazing people and their determination that can protect the environment and change history. Even then, I don't think that it solidified in me that I was going to be an environmentalist; I was young and caught up in many things.After I left school, I travelled to India and Nepal, where I saw some serious environmental degradation. I was questioning many things; I saw so much injustice, unfairness and environmental destruction. I saw what can happen when you don't have a strong rule of law and an environmental protection priority. I'd come from England, which, as beautiful as it is, it's a very modified landscape without many wild spaces. I felt a longing to return to Australia to live somewhere warm and do something meaningful.I found myself here in the Northern Rivers, joining the campaign with friends and the North East Forest Alliance to protect the last remaining Old Growth Forests in NSW. I found myself on the forest blockade frontlines at Chaelundi.It was the most incredible experience I could have had. I met incredible people, so many clever scientists and ecologists. I learnt so much about our forests and their functions. I realised that all the people I was working with and connecting with were people who could see environmental injustice and were prepared to fight it.I realised that a lot of the people that I was connecting with were also people who were here at Terania Creek in 1979, at Protester Falls. The people who stood up against the State and the Forestry Commission and stopped the logging of our precious unique rainforests.Some had gone to the Franklin blockade. It was a serious sense of deep connection and community with people who came from all walks of life, yet had this common thread pulling them together, a cause bigger than us all.Our campaign was part of a bigger picture to get the Government to pass better environmental protection laws. We are such an exploitative culture, so much of our so-called productivity is based on environmental exploitation, harm and destruction. My campaigning was very much engaged in the frontline, blockading, so the frontline civil resistance movement, but also legal cases, the law around the environment, and the politics and the policy of environment.  I suppose, we were all people ahead of our time, trying to buy time until others wake up to the understanding of how important the health of our environment is to all of us.  Around that time, when I was finishing my time on the forest frontlines, I was bringing up my family. I had my first baby when I was around 20, so I knew I had to settle down and stop blockading and locking onto bulldozers. I was living on the beautiful Mt Nardi, behind Nimbin, and one of my friends and wonderful colleagues, now former Magistrate and Dean of the SCU Law School, David Heilpern, said to me that I should go and study law at Southern Cross.  I was very hesitant at first. I barely finished my HSC. I was quite a distracted student, as I was so focused on the world and other issues. I eventually enrolled in the law degree at Southern Cross University as a mature-aged student, and after completing my first semester, I just loved it and fell in love with the law; it all just made sense. It felt like it was a language that I knew. It had concepts about justice and fairness, which I was passionate about. I remember, at the beginning of my law degree, having a vision of opening an Environmental Defenders Office in the Northern Rivers. EDO is a community legal centre which specialises in public interest and environmental law.  The EDO was based in Sydney, and I watched it at the forefront of environmental law in New South Wales, winning cases and protecting the environment by working with communities. I just thought, ‘Gosh, wouldn't that be great? That's what I'd like to do!’ I got my law degree with first-class honours, and I also won the University Medal. I was an absolute nerd for the law; I couldn't stop. I just loved it!  I had my second child halfway through my law degree, and then I worked as a lawyer in Lismore with a wonderful solicitor. I was also lecturing Environmental Law at Southern Cross University at the time as well.After some time, the then CEO of the Environmental Defenders Office called me and said, “Hi, Sue, we've never met, but we're thinking of opening a branch office in the Northern Rivers, and we'd love your advice and perhaps even for you to be a part of it.” I was just so taken about and thought, “How did that happen? Who would have thought?” Then he called me back and I gave him advice about how he could set up that Legal Centre that would work. He called me back and informed me they were advertising for a solicitor and thought I should apply. I knew it was my destiny. I applied and, of course, I got the job.  Two of us solicitors opened the branch office of the Environmental Defenders Office in Lismore servicing the Northern Rivers region. We were co-located with the Northern Rivers Community Legal Centre. My colleague Jessica and I pioneered this amazing Legal Centre that specialised in public interest, environmental law, and it was just fantastic.I was there from about 2006 till 2012. We worked with heaps of people in the community around the whole region. We helped farmers, environmentalists and communities to use our environmental laws to protect their local environment. We were around when the Bentley CSG battle was on. We provided a lot of assistance around that. I took on lots of court cases and provided so much legal advice. We also offered lots of education for farmers and rural landholders to help them better understand environmental laws and help them comply with their environmental legal obligations. It was an unbelievably positive experience.  We were so successful at the EDO and not just the Northern Rivers branch, that I worked very closely with the NSW head office. We were taking on some big coal companies, such as Rio Tinto and BHP in court, challenging their coal approvals in the Hunter Valley because of the impact they were having on the climate. We were the victims of our own success because we won, and we were right.The mining companies fought back really hard, and politically, they tried to stop us from doing what we were doing. That's where I learnt how corruptible our democracy really is and how much influence the fossil fuel industry has over our democracy. Even though the court said we were right, the mining companies couldn't hack it. They went to the Government of the day and told them that they had to get rid of the EDO. They were saying you can't have a Legal Centre run by a bunch of environmental lawyers that challenge them in courts and stop them from mining. It was very controversial because politics and law are meant to be separate, but they were attacking our funding, and the EDO took a hit.Many in our organisation became insecure about their job status, causing a few to leave. Our CEO said to me, maybe you could come to Sydney and take over the EDO as the principal solicitor. I knew I had to do it because I was good at my job, but I also understood the politics of what was happening, and we just needed some of that campaign and fight back spirit.  I made the decision to do it. However, it meant I had to work in Sydney, away from my family. My partner and I had six kids between us, some still young and living in South Gundurimba out on our farm.My partner is a farmer, among many other things. He was so supportive of me taking this job, understanding that it was really what I had to do. I knew I couldn’t bring my family with me cause it was unrealistic having to relocate school-aged kids to Sydney and having to give up the farm. From 2012 until 2017, I was going to Sydney every week to work and coming home on weekends when I could to spend my time back at the farm with the family.  We saved and turned the EDO around, but unfortunately, we had to close the Northern Rivers branch office, which was really sad and a lot of people in the community wished it was still here. It was a great institution and a great place for the community to come, get educated about the law and go out and make a difference. In 2017, I felt like it was time for me to move on from EDO. I'd been at this fantastic institution for over a decade, and in that time it had very much become me, and I had very much become it. It was a heavy load, and I loved it. Nearly every week, I was in the newspapers and on the TV talking about what we were doing across the State. I was taking on the big end of the town, and we were winning most of them. I knew for me it was time to move on, it was someone else’s turn.  I opened my own small boutique law firm here in Lismore, where I worked from home and just took on cases I wanted to. I also took on a load of cases representing environmental protesters from around the state and in Queensland. I represented lots of Adani protesters, who were all some of the most wonderful clients imaginable. Nurses, teachers, doctors and many amazing members of the community from all across Australia.I took that time as well to begin working more at our farm out here in South Gundurimba and investing in our farming business. We predominantly grow dryland rice, and that's because I convinced my hubby that we should be activist farmers. He is amazingly innovative and hardworking, and I knew we could make it work. We wanted to prove that you can grow rice without having to steal so much water from the rivers, as they do down in the Riverina. Irrigation paddy rice is a terrible contributor to climate change, causing intense methane emissions. The world has been put on notice that we're going to have to change the way we grow rice, and I wanted to be part of that.  I eventually decided that I would run as the Greens candidate in the 2019 State Election. I'm not completely sure why I ultimately made that decision; I just got very excited about the prospect of change for Lismore with the then Nationals member Thomas George retiring from the seat. I thought it was a great opportunity to try and swing Lismore in a more progressive direction for the first time in 54 years. I ran a very positive community-powered campaign on the grounds of environmental protection, cleaning the river, rebuilding the agriculture sector and dealing with climate change. I wanted Lismore to be a part of that change. But I also campaigned for more innovative transport, housing and more public health and education services for our region. I first got involved in the Greens back in 1996 when I was involved in forest politics. I actually ran in the 1996 election for the seat of Page. I did that to elevate the campaign around forest protection. It wasn't the politics at the time I was interested in, but it was the issue I wanted to draw attention to.  When I was at the EDO, I was not engaged in party politics. I supported the Greens locally because the Greens resonate with my deep concern for the environment and commitment to justice. A number of people contacted me and asked me to run for Lismore, and I did. We ran with a goal to get elected, but to support Labor because we knew Lismore needed change, and it was time to have a progressive woman representing us. I loved every minute of the campaign. We worked super hard, and we ran a positive exciting campaign.  After the state election, I was getting back on with my law work having a ball here at the farm. That’s when a casual vacancy in the New South Wales Upper House came up, and Bob Brown and a couple of other Greens colleagues tapped me on the shoulder and encouraged me to run. Initially, I made the decision not to do it because I was so satisfied with what I was doing in my small legal practice and here at the farm. However, it just kept twinging in my mind. I realised that all of the work I had done, with all of the wonderful people across the State for so many years, was not going to end. I had to take all of their work, passion and the knowledge they had instilled in me to the Upper House and keep fighting for justice.  I ran for the casual vacancy and was very privileged and humbled that the Greens elected me as their representative in the New South Wales Upper House. I've been there for two years now as of next month and I am absolutely loving it. My current portfolios are environment, justice planning, agriculture and First Nations justice. I am also very active in the Parliament's committees. I am the Chair of Portfolio Committee 7 Planning and Environment, and I am a member of a number of others. All of my work as a lawyer, a farmer and an activist has really helped me to be able to slip into my role in the upper house. I am a worker, I find it hard to stop. I have lost the off switch, and I think that's ok for now.   Right now, I'm very rarely in the same place for too long. In sitting weeks, I’m obviously down at Macquarie Street in Parliament for the week. I travel the State a lot, but I also love working from the farm. I love gardening, and our horses and we have koalas. I am passionate about protecting koalas and growing their habitat. We have planted 10,000 trees, and we have more to plant. I have my eighth grandchild on the way right now which I’m very excited and grateful for.  I love where I am right now, in the Upper House with the Greens and balancing that with the farm back at home. The reality is we are far from where we need to be. We are in a climate, an extinction and a cost of living crisis, and our young people are really struggling, but the politics is not responding. We are still logging our precious public native forests for goodness sake. I will keep fighting for environmental and social justice with all of my might.

SUNDAY PROFILE: Lyn Larsen - recently inducted into Australia's Cricketing Hall of Fame
SUNDAY PROFILE: Lyn Larsen - recently inducted into Australia's Cricketing Hall of Fame

30 December 2023, 6:26 PM

Lyn Larsen is Lismore's most famous locally-born cricket player. She captained the Australian Women's Cricket team at the tender age of 22, played in 15 Tests and 49 One-Day Internationals including the World Cup victory in 1988. Lyn's list of awards are impressive, NSW Hall of Champions, NSW Cricket Hall of Fame, Sport Australia Hall of Fame, Life Member Cricket NSW, Honorary Life Member of the MCC (Lord's cricket ground) and in 2020 was awarded the Member of the Order of Australia for significant service to cricket as a player, selector, manager and coach at elite level.Last week, Lyn added to that list when she was inducted into the Australian Cricket Hall of FameFor those that haven't read Lyn's life story, this is her Larsen's Sunday Profile. For those that have, enjoy reading it again for Lyn deserves the credit she has received.I am a born and bred Lismore girl, being brought into this world at the Lismore Base Hospital on 3rd of February, 1963. I lived my entire life at the family farm at Tuntable Creek where my parents, George and Beth Larsen, ran a dairy farm which later changed to bananas and beef cattle. My grandfather came from Denmark when he was 15 and married Lillian Rose, whose family had selected a number of properties in Tuntable Creek, hence our address Rose Road, Tuntable Creek. My brother, Peter and I still run the family farm but with us both working, it is more of a lifestyle and a lot of hard work, than to make a living.The other side of my family came from Nimbin and were quite well known. Mum, Elizabeth Faulks (daughter of Bert and Myra Faulks) grew up on a dairy farm as well. My great Grandmother Eleanor Stewart was the first woman to drive a car in the area and Nanna was a stalwart of the CWA, Anglican Church and Nimbin Show Society. Pop was well known for his dairy cattle and love of horses, rugby league and cricket. The family farm was close to the village and as such was secured as the site of the Nimbin Aquarius festival in 1973.Some people might remember my family from the old-time dance band where Mum, Dad, Peter and myself would play dances, kitchen teas, 21st birthdays and weddings around the Lismore district.The Larsen band, May 1977 (I was 14). Dad (George) on drums, Beth (Mum) on piano, Peter (brother) on trumpet and Lyn on the button accordion.I did my schooling at Tuntable Creek Primary School, a one-teacher school with anything from 12 to 15 children in total. My teenage years were spent at Richmond River High School before I did a Diploma of Teaching at Northern Rivers College of Advanced Education. I converted that to a Bachelor of Education, graduating with Distinction and being awarded the College Medal for Academic Excellence.My cricketing career was not derived out of a childhood passion. My first love was tennis. Dad and I would play for hours on our home court. Cricket was always there though. We used to play out the front of the house at home, at Pop’s place on the weekend and we played it a lot at primary school. In fact, sport was a big part of my early schooling. We did our schoolwork in the morning and in the afternoon we’d play a variety of games. The playground was quite hilly but there was a flat patch. We used to play matches against Numulgi where they had predominantly boys and we girls, and yes, we would come away victorious!One day when I was 14 one of my friends from high school asked me to fill in one Saturday, this was my first official game of competition cricket. It was completely by chance. That became the summer ritual for Dad and I (he ended up umpiring) for the next 15 years or so.I was selected in the Lismore team to contest the Country Championships the next year. From there the NSW Country Firsts, the NSW Under 21 side to play in Perth and the following year, 1979, the open NSW side. My first Australian representation was in the Under 23 side in 1981 and then Vice Captain of the Australian Under 25 team to tour New Zealand in 1983. My full Australian debut was on the 1984 tour of India, where I celebrated my 21st birthday. That was my favourite tour, probably because I had no responsibilities as such and could just enjoy being part of the team and embrace all that India had to offer.I made my debut for Australia in 1984 and was made captain in 1986 at 22, the youngest captain at that time.A 22-year-old Lyn Larsen at Oakes Oval after being named Captain of the Australian Women's Cricket team in 1986I remember the first time I was named captain. I was batting in the final against Victoria at Flinders University, Adelaide when, at tea, someone asked me to go to the back of the change room building. I found myself in front of Sylvia Faram, President of the AWCC (Australian Women’s Cricket Council), who in her very distinguished English accent said "Lyn, I’d like to invite you to captain the Australian Women’s Cricket Team”. I can still hear those words. Obviously, it was a very proud and life-changing moment. In lots of ways, that title defined me, who I was and what I did for that period, and was the catalyst for opportunities that emerged down the track. That became the ritual from 1986 to 1993, being called aside and invited to lead the team.My most special memories are team/captaincy related, not so much me as an individual. I took 8 for 58 in a tour game in India, 4 for 33 and a half-century at the Gabba against England in 1985 and made 86 at North Sydney oval in a world record fourth-wicket partnership at the time with Denise Annetts. Those individual performances were eclipsed when we won my first test as captain in England in 1987 when we defeated England in the first women’s 5-day test in Sydney with only seconds to spare before a torrential downpour which would have seen the game end in a draw and winning the 1988 World Cup at the MCG as captain.The victorious 1988 World Cup team at the MCGSo much has changed in the world of cricket since I was playing. The standard and the skill level of the top players is fantastic. The contracts are very lucrative, full-time playing commitments through the year, media, crowds and a cast of support staff, it is quite surreal and blows me away. Cricket for me was never a career when I started my journey. It was a love, an enormous commitment and a source of satisfaction and pride but it had to fit into everyday farm life and study and work. There were numerous overnight bus trips to Sydney to attend trials and matches. I’d play club cricket Saturday afternoon at Richmond River Park, leave early to catch the overnight bus, get off the next morning and go to the trials or practice match then get back on the bus Sunday night and be back in Lismore Monday morning for school, college or work. Add Australian commitments to that and it was pretty full on.Back in those days, you paid for everything at every level, so it was a big financial impost for my parents and when I look back on it, I feel quite guilty as I know they never had a lot, but there was never any hesitation in finding the money for my cricket exploits. I always said we probably owned Kirkland’s Bus Lines by the time I finished playing.My other great support was the Lismore Women’s Cricket Association which hosted countless fundraisers. I will never forget the Lyn Larsen appeal that was launched to assist my trip to England in 1987, a feature of that being the Women vs the Gentlemen of Lismore Cricket match on Oakes Oval, where the local businessmen donated generously to be involved. I was blessed to have such a supportive network of family and friends, and was always proud to be Lyn Larsen from Lismore because of that support.I am so proud to say that I am a Member of the Sport Australian Hall of Fame, the NSW Hall of Champions, a member of the Cricket NSW Hall of Fame, Life Member of Cricket NSW and last year I was privileged to be given Honorary Life Membership of the MCC (Lord’s Cricket Ground). I am overwhelmed and to some extent embarrassed as I felt there were so many more deserving players. I was a successful captain, not a great individual, so felt somewhat of an imposter receiving accolades based on the performances of my teammates. My Mum had passed away at this time and my Dad was in the Nimbin Aged Care facility when I received my awards so my brother Peter was by my side. The staff in Nimbin photocopied the article from the Northern Star and put it up in his room, reading it out to him when they could. They said he was very proud.Funnily enough, I never missed cricket once I retired. I missed the comradery and team side of things though. So loved my years managing teams as I got to watch cricket, to travel and had time to talk to people on the sidelines, something I hadn’t been able to do whilst playing. The opportunities that followed provided similar outcomes, so while I retired in 1994, I was still engaged with cricket in different capacities until 2012.So, do I have any regrets about my playing days compared to now? None at all, and I think that is a view shared by many of my era. I heard one of the Australian girls say recently that on their last tour to India they got to do some sightseeing. That is a far cry from a young Lyn Larsen and her teammates who rode mopeds around Hyderabad in the wee hours of the morning, who slept in concrete stadiums with toilets that didn’t flush, who roamed the streets at will without bodyguards, who mingled with the crowds and supporters, who were billeted for the majority of a 2-month tour of England. It is great to see where the game is, but I wouldn’t change my time for anything.

SUNDAY PROFILE: Arts powerhouse Rhoda Roberts
SUNDAY PROFILE: Arts powerhouse Rhoda Roberts

19 June 2021, 9:03 PM

Bundjalung woman and arts powerhouse Rhoda Roberts has spent decades shining on an international and national stage.She talks to Liina Flynn at the Lismore App about her life as a writer, actor, radio star and event director; how she grew up with racism, a prominent preacher father - and dealt with the tragic death of her twin sister.Now, in 2021, Rhoda said she’s now happy to be home, working on Bundjalung Country as NORPA’s inaugural Creative Director First Nations.“It was hard to get job in this town,” Rhoda laughed. “Everyone thinks I’ve moved back to the region, but I’ve been travelling home regularly for years“I bought a property at Jackie Bulbin Flats years ago and lived on a property with no power - and saved money to finished the build.“My arts advocate and patron, Steven Field is a builder and sandstone mason – he helped me built it with love.”NORPAAfter being the Head of Indigenous Programming at the Sydney Opera House for nine years - as well as running major arts festivals such as Festival of Dreaming and Partijima, she’s now happy to slow down a little.“It’s great to now be working part time at a venue in regional Australia on the lands of my Widjabal Wiabal people,” she said.“I never expected it – all those years living overseas, now I’ve come back home and secured a position in the Northern Rivers.“I’ve been on the NORPA board for a while – they have always encouraged working with Elders and building capacity to tell the stories of First Nations peoples.“There are so many stories to tell and I’m looking forward to developing talks and programs.”BeginningsRhoda was born in Sydney’s Canturbury Hospital in 1958. She spent the first years of her life in Sydney before her father, Widjabal man and preacher Frank Roberts jnr,became homesick – and in 1963 decided to move the family back to Lismore“Australia was a redneck country at the time and my father was dedicated to making life better or Indigenous people,” she said.“My dad was appointed to the Australian Mission Board and his job was going to Aboriginal missions and bringing attention to the poverty and shanty dwellings there.“So, we moved back to Lismore and lived on the outskirts and I went to Lismore heights Primary School and Richmond River High School.”Rhoda Roberts and NORPA creative director Julian Louis.True love storyRhoda said her mother and devout father getting together was a “true love story”.“Dad grew with my granny in a shanty on Country at Cubawee (and Lismore Council bulldozed it on her).“Dad moved to Greenwich to do theological studies - and mum was a third generation white Australian,” she said.“At the time, Aboriginal people lived under apartheid and were still classified as flora and fauna and fauna. Dad lived under the protection act and curfews applied to him.“They met at a meeting - she noticed him and thought ‘who’s that?’ and he saw her and thought ‘she will be my wife’, then they fell in love.“My mum didn’t listen when people said a child of colour didn’t work - it was about how you brought someone up and honouring blood lines and building relationships with both sides of the family.“Mum taught me the classics at a young age and would always pull us up on our grammar and said we needed to outsmart and outclass other people, to them show themwere equals.”Lismore“When the family moved back to Lismore, dad set up a language centre and the Bundjalung Tribal Society,” she said.“He wanted to access about 35 houses across Lismore so Aboriginal people could rent them, but real estates had a different assumption about what that might mean.“Through the Bundjalung Tribal Society, dad wanted to start a newsletter and became the first chairman of the Koori Mail Board – along with all the uncles.“They developed it into national Indigenous newspaper The Koori Mail - then dad set up Namitjira Haven at Alstonville.“He always looked at things through a compassionate lens – it was to help Australians come to terms with the atrocities that still happen every day to Indigenous people.“Every day, when a house is sold, it is an act of theft against Indigenous people. We needed teach a better understanding of why our Mob would self medicate.“We needed to educate everyone and create opportunities and prospects for us – to create pride in being Aboriginal.Visionary“Dad was a visionary, so was his father and grandfather – and it obviously made a big mark on me.“My grandfather Lyle Roberts senior was the last senor initiated Bundjalung man – in the time when cedar cutters were destroying the Big Scrub and rivers were used as transportation.“As Lismore was being built, he could see the greed and theft and the white approach to success and could see it was here to stay.“He wrote some core principles for us to live by – and you can read it on a plaque in Spinks Park.“He said as Bundjalung people, we always retain pride in race and colour and retain our identity in language – and consider our relationships to make a future world.“He knew it would take time for change because most Australians had no understanding of ecology and bloodlines.“For me, the creative industries became a platform to be able to express our insights and communicate our messages to the wider audience.”School and racism“I wanted to be a journalist, but Lismore in the early 70s I was advised by my school careers advisor teacher that even though I was biracial, I would end up like cousins on the mission.“That career advice was destroying - but I’m glad I had to prove her wrong. She had no belief we could reach benchmarks.“I was a good student and didn’t miss a day of school. From the age of 16, even the careers advisor at Richmond River High made me aware I had no value as an Aboriginal woman in our society.“I was brought up to believe by my parents that you can achieve anything if you work hard - so, I did communications and journalism studies.“I had been volunteering as a nursing candy striper and saw a total lack of empathy for our people – dad always encouraged us to volunteer.Nurse“At Lismore Base Hospital, a matron interviewed me and told me girls like me would never be a nursing sister, but I could be a nursing aid.“Luckily my mother was a strong independent woman and said I should go to Sydney and be a registered nurse“I graduated then cam back home and celebrated with my parents - my mum was proud I was a registered nursing sister.“Before that, I worked at Woolies, and when I left, HR there told me I’d be back in six weeks because ‘my lot won’t last at anything’. I came back and said ‘you were wrong, I did achieve this’.London“Then I went off to London. I travelled overseas and worked and had a stable career."Then I left nursing to study in the arts in 1987.“My mum was shocked I gave up the security for a career in arts.TV and radio“My school drama teacher had inspired me to be a writer and actress. I got some acting work making a guest appearance on A Country Practice and Home and Away.“Then I got involved with playwriting and the National Aboriginal Theatre Trust in the 1980s and I took the role as assistant director of writing.“I was volunteering for Radio Redfern and it was through those shows that the ABC offered me a job on national radio, then on TV.“I was the first Aboriginal to host a prime time national affairs show - Vox Populi and also Instyle on Channel Ten.“I was skinny then,” Rhoda laughed.Olympics “Then the Olympics came to Australia in 1993-94 and SOCOC employed me to direct the cultural Olympiad program.“They has seen a show I did at a festival - and invited me to work with David Page from Bangarra on the opening ceremony.“It was an opportunity to share and make sure we represented our culture in the right way. After that, we started the Deadly Awards and grew that over the years.Opera House“In the 1990’s, I was on the board of the Opera House – at the time, there was no Aboriginal programming or resident companies and we chose Bangarra.“I spent nine years on the board of the Opera House, then took up the position as Head of Indigenous Progamming there.“It was a wonderful opportunity and when I finally left, I knew it was time to move on.“When Covid came, I wanted more control with what I did and I wanted to freelance more.“It feels good to have set it up for the next great person to come along.“We brought change through narrative and showcased our art and diversity – it was a brave thing to do because we were taking risks.“In 1995 I founded the Festival of Dreaming and was its director until 2009.Songlines“At the Opera House, looked at gaps in the market and built capacity and increased increase audiences – including First Nations audiences.“We increased the visibility of our culture – even using the sails of the Opera House to project the Songlines project onto.“We were looking at our endangered languages and it happened because language was outlawed by government policies. We needed to disperse myths about the cultural bases of our societies because so much of what was written about it was inaccurate.“It was an important project that brought awareness to the fact that in urban environments, as well as all territories across Australia, Aboriginal lands were unceeded and the response we got was great.Dance Rites“We also developed Dance Rites because dance was also outlawed and we created a platform and space to reactivate and give new energy to a people whose children had been kidnapped and elders incarcerated.“I also wrote a performance called ‘Natives Gone Wild’ which was about how Indigenous people had been kidnapped and dehumanised to be included in Barnam’s human zoo. I wanted to change the narrative and make people see our history.”PartijimaRhoda was also curator of Partijima, a Festival of Light in Alice Springs.“We used lots of Aboriginal artwork and told the stories of thousands of years through light installations.“The festival took a few years to grow, but now it is a unique festival.“Now, it’s a compliment to me that whether I am in urban or regional environment’s, the fact our senior artists, law men, dancers, painters and story tellers trust me with their work is the greatest review you can get.TragedyIn 1998, Rhoda’s twin sister Lois Roberts was found dead in a forest near Nimbin. Her death remains an unsolved murder to this day.It’s something Rhoda said she still thinks about “every day upon waking and sleeping”.“Her greatest gift to me has been the opportunity for me to raise her daughter Emily,” she said. “It’s quite normal in Aboriginal culture to raise children with family members. “Lois’s death reminds me about the valuing of out women – so many Aboriginal women and men have gone missing and it has been discredited by police when we try to report it.“We said we didn’t know what had happened to her and we were upset and worried.“The police said stop being a nuisance – she’s gone walkabout. She wasn’t valued or investigated. “These days, the Black Lives Matter (BLM) movement is looking at structural changes needed in our society to change this.“In Lismore, when the German backpacker woman Simone was murdered, we saw the police investigating.“We even saw the mayor, who lives on our land, encourage community to do a fundraiser for her boyfriend – but not for a woman who grew up here all her life“Now BLM is the catalyst, along with Covid, for us to review ourselves.“It’s time for us to change, be inclusive and see kindness in all things.”Rhoda has also been awarded an order of Australian medal for distinguished service to the performing arts through a range of leadership and advocacy roles in the development, promotion and presentation of contemporary Indigenous culture".

1-20 of 138
The Lismore App
The Lismore App
Your local digital newspaper


Get it on the Apple StoreGet it on the Google Play Store