• Let’s fix an old problem

    IN this week’s SPEAKER’S CORNER, St Bartholemew’s House chief executive JOHN BERGER talks about the alarming increase in the number of homeless older women, and how the WA government can do more to help them. The homeless support organisation is based in East Perth, and launched a dedicated older women’s service in 2014. 

    HOMELESSNESS can and does happen to anyone, given the wrong set of circumstances.

    It is disturbing to know that the incidence of older women’s homelessness is growing, with women aged over 55 being a growing cohort of those experiencing, or at risk of, homelessness in WA, and across the nation.

    This is a result of the effects of domestic violence, family relationship breakdown, financial difficulties, lack of affordable housing, loss or lack of employment and cash in the bank, inadequate superannuation, poor mental health and little or no support during difficult times.

    It is a deeply traumatic event, with long-term effects on the individual and their family — and the WA community.

    We know too well that to do nothing about homelessness costs our society greatly, whereas housing and supporting people to rebuild their lives is simply a more cost-effective solution.

    St Bart’s winter appeal is a great opportunity to not only raise financial support but awareness of this issue affecting all West Australians, and to raise the issue of older women’s homelessness.

    • An older female client enjoys the facilities at St Bart’s. Photo supplied

    Homelessness in women aged over 55 has risen by 31 per cent between 2011-2016, according to census data.

    Yet there is no dedicated federal and state government funding allocated to respond to this disturbing trend.

    While the government is yet to respond, St Bart’s has responded with the help of our major donors and corporate partners.

    In late 2014 we opened a dedicated older women’s service that has assisted almost 100 women.

    When surveyed, older women clients stated that before coming to St Bart’s they were ‘in crisis or barely surviving’ or ‘struggling to manage’ compared with their current circumstances of ‘managing OK’ and ‘doing quite well or making progress’.

    We know with the right support, it is achievable to re-establish older women into safe and secure homes within six months.

    Clients like Marie (name changed), who have lived a fortunate life – attended a private girls school and trained as a specialist music teacher – have been “incredibly shocked” to find themselves experiencing homelessness.

    “Basically after 18 years of marriage, my former husband left me – but not before ripping me off. I couldn’t pay the mortgage, so it wasn’t long before I started sleeping in my car. Someone gave me the number of St Bart’s. It was great to move into accommodation at their older women’s service. It gave me breathing space, and with their help I moved into a rental,” she said.

    St Bart’s would particularly like the WA government to recognise the specific needs of older women experiencing homelessness by allocating funds and resources accordingly in their upcoming state-wide homelessness strategy.

    If our older women’s homelessness service received government funding, we could expand our operations and support more women – faster.

    It would also provide stability in terms of ensuring there is an ongoing service response for older women.

    Failure to respond to this need will result in an increase in demand for government services.

    This means more pressure on our hospitals and health and mental health services, and ultimately it will cost our community financially and socially.

    We encourage the community to use the just-finished Homelessness Week to talk about the issue and what you can do about it. Donate to our older women’s service or volunteer your time – there are many positive and engaging opportunities at St Bart’s.

    Post your thoughts on social media to start the conversation or talk to your local MP about getting behind funding for homelessness and address the needs of older women, in their plans to eliminate homelessness throughout our great state.

    To donate or volunteer go to stbarts.org.au/how-you-can-help

  • Takeaway treat

    LOOKING for gold plate awards amongst the greasy spots on Little Lebanon’s walls is like searching for habitable planets in a sky full of stars.

    But if that makes dine in seem a little challenging, consider some take-away, or you’ll be missing out on the most awesome Lebanese tucker.

    “The best I have ever eaten,” is how my well-travelled companion summed up her falafel kebab ($9).

    I normally find falafel a bit bland, but this was delicious.

    Maybe it’s because Lebanese cuisine insists on adding some fava beans to the chickpea mix, while most other cultures stick with one or the other.

    The broad beans certainly livened-up this falafel, which had a lovely smooth texture inside and a crunchy exterior.

    My gourmet mixed platter ($24) was nestled, somewhat disconcertingly, in a styrofoam container.

    But putting aside my environmental concerns, I couldn’t fault the four barbecued skewers, simple salad and hummus.

    The chicken, lamb, beef and prawn skewers were all beautifully marinated in rich spices while the flesh was tender and hot.

    I didn’t really do the hummus justice because I was well and truly full by the time I discovered it under the meat; but what I nibbled was creamy and smooth.

    The coffee to wash it all down was perfectly serviceable.

    We were baffled by the signs stating that food was not to be consumed in the alfresco fronting Wanneroo Road.

    But the riddle was soon answered when an old, bearded fellow took a seat and was offered one of  Little Lebanon’s shishas.

    Some younger chaps sat down at the other end and were soon puffing away and having a glorious laugh and chat, while my friend polished off a rollie.

    Little Lebanon was an unknown quantity when I invited my discerning, foodie friend along, but I’m happy to report it got both thumbs up.

    by STEVE GRANT

    Little Lebanon Cafe
    13A Wanneroo Road, Joondanna
    12 noon-1am every day
    Order online at littlelebanoncafe.com.au

  • Compassion overboard

    WHAT is the truth and how can politics and the media distort it?

    That is the central theme of Threshold, a play set in a Sydney newsroom in 2016.

    The play was inspired by journalist Chris Kenny’s first visit to Nauru in late-2015, but there’s also an “opaque reference to what’s happening in the US at the moment” and the “fake news movement”, says playwright James Palm.

    Kenny was the first Australian journalist allowed in to Nauru for almost two years.

    During his trip, he realised how politics and press censorship had aided in masking the true extent of suffering and abuse of asylyn seekers imprisoned on the tiny island.

    • Esther Longhurst and Benj D’Addario play Alexandra Kastellorizo and Bill Mackenna in Threshold.

    The protagonist of Threshold is Bill Mackenna (Benj D’Addario), an experienced hack struggling with his conservative ideas of gender, the Australian immigration system and the role of the media.

    After years of working under male managers at his newspaper,  Mackenna is broadsided by the appointment of female news editor Alexandra Kastellorizo (Esther Longhurst).

    His new girlfriend, refugee lawyer Kelly Dawson (Kylie Bywaters), also challenges his beliefs, gradually encouraging him to look at the Nauru situation through a more humane lens.

    This puts Mackenna’s long-running relationship with the country’s immigration minister, Peter Franklin (Jeff Watkins)under strain.

    More right-wing and ruthless than Mackenna, Franklin’s view of the immigration system is distorted by his own political agenda.

    Palm insists the character is a “caricature of different negative people” and not explicitly based on Australian home affairs minister Peter Dutton.

    Palm took several years to write and develop Threshold, and director Bridget Le May came onboard during the second draft of the script.

    After looking for something that centred on the immigration debate, Palm says Le May “attached herself to the project immediately”.

    Threshold is on at The Blue Room Theatre in Northbridge until August 25.

    by WADE ZAGLAS

  • ASTROLOGY: August 18 – August 25, 2018

    ARIES (Mar 21 – Apr 20)
    Mars appears to be going backwards in Capricorn. It would be a good idea to rethink practical matters. There’s a very good chance that you will have to take a fresh tack. Don’t take too much heed of your wounded pride, even though it might sting a bit. You will nail it in the end.

    TAURUS (Apr 21 – May 20)
    You have charged head-long into a china shop. It’s time to review the damage. Uranus possessed you with an impulse and now he is retrograde, giving you a chance to catch your breath and reappraise the situation. Your actions need to carry all the significance you wish to express.

    GEMINI (May 21 – June 21)
    These are powerful times for you. Life is asking you to step up. There’s no satisfaction whatsoever to be had lolling around in your comfort zone. Mercury’s passage through Leo should by rights be giving you courage. It is definitely not enough to simply put on a colourful show. Mean it.

    CANCER (June 22 – July 22)
    The rising Moon passes in front of Jupiter in Scorpio, to shift the week into gear. To say this is an intense start to the week would be an understatement. When the Moon passes through Scorpio, all our cravings for transformation and breakthrough surface. Factor in a directional shift.

    LEO (July 23 – Aug 22)
    The Sun is passing through the final few degrees of Leo. If there’s anything you haven’t done in the last weeks that needs doing, there’s every chance you will be possessed by the impulse to do it, quickly! There’s likely to be more energy than finesse involved, should you be so possessed.

    VIRGO (Aug 23 – Sept 22)
    You are laying low awaiting your time. Others are busy with the limelight, possibly upping the ante and making all sorts of scenes in an effort to make their point. You know full well that all things must pass. The froth and the fury will soon dissipate, allowing you to be sensible.

    LIBRA (Sept 23 – Oct 23)
    Venus is soothing your restless heart. These have been busy times. The Sun in Leo is offering you a sparkling sense of harmony and possibility. Practical realities will come back to you soon enough. For now, identify and appreciate this little break in life’s traffic. The future is full of light.

    SCORPIO (Oct 24 – Nov 21)
    The Moon lights up the early part of the week with her fleeting presence in your sign. Though her visit is brief, the current of feeling she ignites is strong. It’s because she’s in cahoots with Jupiter. Use her soft, clear light to help yourself to break out of a tangle you’ve been in for way too long.

    SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22 – Dec 21)
    As your inner, emotional life is so full, at the moment, it is entirely appropriate that you incarnate yourself as a home-body. Sagittarians are prone to doing the occasional spectacular directional pivots. You may well be in such a transition right now. Truth makes you alter your movements.

    CAPRICORN (Dec 22 – Jan 19)
    You are host to three truly heavyweight planets – Pluto, Saturn and Mars. They are all retrograde; appearing to go backwards. You have barrel-loads of energy, yet are being reflective with it. Others might think you are holding out. You’re not. You are rightfully considering your next move.

    AQUARIUS (Jan 20 – Feb 18)
    The focus is half on relationship and half on work. With a bit of luck, one is feeding the other. The Leo Sun is reminding you that when your heart ignites and catches fire, then there is no disharmony, no fragmentation. Fragmentation is what the mind does. It breaks things down. Don’t go there.

    PISCES (Feb 19 – Mar 20)
    This is a reflective time. Neptune is retrograde. It’s turning-in time. Get cosy. Find someone else who’s in the same mood. Cosy up there. Relax. Rest. Dream. If anyone calls you lazy, remind them that no lazy person has hurt anybody. It’s the type ‘A’ personalities that cause all the mayhem.

  • Fit for a bard

    THERE’S more to this Leederville home than you think, and like Dr Who’s Tardis it seems to go on forever.

    The neat, compact brick exterior is deceptive, and it’s not until you wander down the long hall and discover a huge open-plan kitchen/dining/family area that you realize how big this home really is.

    By then you will have passed the theatre room, study and two of the three bedrooms, including the carpeted main with walk-in-robe and semi-en suite.

    Honey-gold timber shimmers underfoot during the seemingly long trek to the living areas, where you’ll find freshly painted white walls in the bright and airy space.

    French doors provide access to what could be a spacious fourth bedroom, or a games or hobby room.

    There’s an appealing openness to the kitchen, which has loads of bench space and a breakfast bar, and looks out across the family room.

    The kitchen also has plenty of drawers, a walk-in-pantry and Miele oven.

    Outside, a sprawling alfresco area is protected by a triple-peaked roof, making it an appealing space to park a tardis – or perhaps compose the odd sonnett.

    The garden is somewhat minimalist, but a stretch of grass and high fences are the foundations for something lush and gorgeous.

    The double garage has a generous work/storage area and the home is fitted with a ducted vacuum system and reverse-cycle air-con.

    Aranmore College and the Leederville Tafe campus are a block away from this Shakespeare Road home, and it’s a 10-minute walk to Leederville’s entertainment area and the Mt Hawthorn’s cafe stip.

    by JENNY D’ANGER

    15 Shakespeare Road, Leederville
    $1.25m
    Basil Fogliani
    0418 925 155
    Edison Residential Property
    9201 9800

  • Great Southern wine tasting at Castelli Estate

    The end of winter is the perfect time to rug up and spend your Saturday tasting wine from the Great Southern Region, with Castelli Estate’s Urban Cellar door in Myaree offering you the full wine tasting experience without the five-hour drive to their Denmark winery.

    Sam and Maria Castelli hail from an abundant country village in Italy’s  Lazio region, but rather than the sunflowers, grain or corn, it was their hometown’s vineyards that inspired the couple’s purchase of an 120-acre farm upon the slopes of Mt Shadforth in Denmark, WA, in 2004.

    The property was bought with a semi-complete winery, which was completed by the family with much love and care over the next two years.

    Winemaker Mike Garland has been part of the team since Castelli Estate’s first vintage, bringing to life what is one now one of the state’s most promising boutique wine brands.

    “Mike is passionate about producing wines that are well balanced and structured,” says Sam Castelli.

    “We have over 28 wines that we produce, from the classic Shiraz and Chardonnay to small batch Fume Blanc, Tempranillo and Gewürztraminer.”

    The winery has just celebrated its 10th vintage and has taken out countless awards, medals and trophies throughout the last decade, winning critical acclaim from Australia’s top wine journalists including Ray Jordan’s “Most Promising Producer” and the coveted James Halliday ratings; “5 Star Winery”, “Best by Region”, and “Best Value Winery”.

    The Urban Cellar Door is open every Saturday from 11am – 5pm for you to be part of the experience.

  • Curtain call for public space?

    STIRLING council is on the verge of selling a strip of land beside the Astor Theatre in Mt Lawley, but locals say they’re missing a “magical opportunity” to make it a vibrant public space.

    The land, which forms part of the car park in front of the Fat Dragon Diner, is going for a song.

    It’s valued at $1818 per square meter, but the council’s proposing to sell it for $1600 per square metre.

    In 2007 the owner of the block behind it wanted to buy it back “with an intention to develop both lots,” according to an old council agenda from 2011.

    The Mount Lawley Society is concerned the strip will get amalgamated with the block behind, and they’ll end up with a big building all the way down to the footpath.

    They’d rather have a spacious alfresco area or some greenery amongst the pavement, like the wide outdoor area at the Esplanade Hotel in Fremantle. Along with locals and traders the society are lobbying the council to keep the land.

    Society president Paul Collins says Mt Lawley lacks public spaces.

    • Mt Lawley community members and traders aren’t keen on a car park on public land being sold off along Walcott Street. Photo by Steve Grant

    Lateral thinking

    “The society is not opposed to a redevelopment of the adjoining land but believes council needs to maintain a significant portion, if not all, of the setback it owns to allow for vibrant, alfresco dining and public space for trees and seating if and when the adjoining site is developed.”

    Mr Collins says he is surprised the land is being sold for less than market value.

    “In my 20 years of commercial property sales experience, an adjoining owner should be paying a premium of up to 20 per cent; not receiving a discount of more than 10 per cent.”

    Mr Collins says “with a little bit of lateral thinking, a new development with an awning above and landscaping, the area could become a vibrant evening dining option for the Mt Lawley community, particularly adjacent to the Astor Theatre”.

    Stirling councillors discussed the item behind closed doors at Tuesday night’s council meeting.

    They voted to send it back to their committee for further discussion, so the decision’s been deferred until at least the next council meeting.

    The strip was purchased by the council decades ago when there were plans to make a left turn lane into Beaufort Street. In 2011 the council considered selling it off and using the funds to build a town square in Mount Lawley, but it didn’t go ahead.

    by DAVID BELL

  • No McWhale face

    A 24-METRE blue whale skeleton will take centre stage at Perth’s new museum in 2020.

    Canadian company Cetacea, a specialist in “skeleton articulation”, has arrived in Perth to begin the 18-month process of designing and fabricating a frame to support the four-tonne skeleton, which will be suspended in Hackett Hall.

    In celebration of what would have been the whale’s 120th birthday this year, Sandgropers have been asked to give it a name.

    “We have already ruled out Whaley McWhale Face, in case anyone was wondering,” quipped culture minister David Templeman.

    • Culture and the arts minister David Templeman with Mike deRoos and Michi Main from Cetacea.

    The winning name will be included in the museum’s display, which will include information on how the skeleton came from a whale stranded at the mouth of the Vasse River, just east of Cape Naturaliste, in 1898.

    WA museum conservators have been working on the skeleton for the past two years, painstakingly cleaning, preparing, scanning and weighing its 194 bones.

    “Our blue whale skeleton has a special place in the hearts of Western Australians,” says Mr Templeman.

    “It is the object that most visitors ask about. It will be a drawcard object that will inspire a new generation of visitors.”

    by MOLLY SCHMIDT

  • Paddle power

    MORE than 300 adrenaline seekers braved the wild weather at the choppier-than-usual Avon Descent last weekend

    The thrilling 124 kilometre whitewater race from Northam to Bayswater is WA’s second-longest running sporting event, and over the last 44 years more than 35,000 competitors have taken part.

    At this year’s event 154 canoeists, paddlers and kayakers managed to finish the race in challenging conditions.

    • Competitors at this year’s Avon Descent. Photo supplied

    Josh Kippin won the single marathon kayak race and Sam Pilton was the highest finishing female, coming fourth in the single kayaker category.

    Bayswater council hosted a Family Fun Day event at the Riverside Gardens finish line, and mayor Dan Bull says it was fantastic to see so many people turn out.

    “I would like to congratulate the competitors who braved the wild weather and took part in the Avon Descent over the weekend,” he told the Voice.

    “It was a very exciting race – one of the fastest we’ve seen in several years.”

    by MOLLY SCHMIDT

  • Mulch magic the gas

    Mt HAWTHORN’S community composting station has helped divert 750 litres of organic waste from landfill in just its first month.

    Instead of the waste festering in a mountain of rubbish – turning into methane as it breaks down under anaerobic conditions – the scraps get broken down in aerobic conditions and can be used as compost.

    The station was started by local environment group Transition Town Vincent using a grant awarded under the city’s community budgeting scheme.

    Veggie scraps

    Transition member Chris Cutress says the amount of organic waste they’ve collected is “absolutely fantastic: it’s exceeded our expectations greatly”.

    He stops at the composting station, situated beside Floreat Athena Football Club, on his bike ride to work and gives the composting tumblers a couple of turns.

    “It’s great we’re getting heaps of people involved and a lot of the local community is bringing their veggie scraps and kitchen scraps down.”

    He’d already been composting at home, but the community station means people in small apartments or with teeny gardens can chip in.

    • Lee Goodall, Irma Lachmund, Behrooz Eslam and Chris Cutress loading up the composting barrel with mulch. Photo supplied

    Anyone who contributes is welcome to pick up some compost when it’s ready.

    “It means we can keep these nutrients local,” Mr Cutress says. “It might encourage people to grow their own veggies in the backyard.”

    Mr Cutress says he joined TTV because he had a background in environmental management and sustainability, “so I wanted to put something of that back into the community … to get the community a bit more involved in these sorts of things – food production, backyard chickens, the stuff I grew up with.

    “As people have smaller blocks and less time and inclination to do these things, a lot of these arts get lost, so I wanted my kids to be able to appreciate this stuff.”

    The group takes any plant-based veggie scraps, but not meat or dairy.

    The scraps gets mixed in with council mulch and take six to eight weeks to break down into humus.

    If you want to start putting your scraps to good use check out the Facebook page “Community Composting Station”.

    by DAVID BELL