Yalambee Hostel opened in new buildings belonging to the Retarded Children's Welfare Association in August 1958. They were on the south-east side of Tolosa Street, Glenorchy. The Association oversaw the Yalambee Hostel Board of Management.
Initially the Hostel had 24 children. Some were there from Monday to Friday and went home at the weekends while others stayed for the full term. During the holidays, wards of state remained at the Hostel or were placed with foster mothers.
Applications for a place at Yalambee Hostel came from the parents who paid a fee for their child's accommodation. At first, the Board did not accept children with health or behavioural problems that might prevent them from attending school. That policy appears to have changed although some staff would have resisted it.
During the early 1980s, Yalambee offered respite care under the Domestic Service Assistance Scheme.
In 1984, funding and staffing problems caused by the structure of the Retarded Children's Welfare Association led to the decision to close the Hostel at weekends and on public holidays. The Department of Community Welfare immediately became aware of the decision because two of the residents were wards of state. This led to a Review of the hostel.
The Review found that the Hostel was institutional in its management of the children with too much emphasis on tidiness and not enough on an individual approach. The children slept in dormitories, lined up for showers, did not choose what they wanted to wear or eat, all went to bed at the same time, and had no personal possessions. The staff took little interest in what they did at school. The children were supposed to help with small tasks such as washing-up but were seldom allowed because the staff considered them slow. One boy told the Review Team that he misbehaved because the staff '" growled at you whether you did the right thing or not'".
The staff kept inadequate records of the children's progress and frequently gave parents conflicting information.
There were disputes between members of staff who supported an old fashioned regimented approach and those who wished to be more 'flexible and innovative'. Some refused to look after children with more challenging problems which meant that they could not be admitted. The Yalambee Board did not support the Matron's attempts to discipline staff.
The Hostel claimed to have a 'home-like atmosphere' but the Review Team dismissed this as a 'synonym for an amateurish and unprofessional approach'.
The Review Team quoted Ben Marris, who wrote:
'It is unreasonable to suggest that any residential child care institution deliberately set out to harm a child, although most would recognise that this can be an unintended consequence of their activity. A common and well documented feature of all organisations, however, is that they tend to concentrate overmuch on their own maintenance and wellbeing to the detriment of progress towards their stated goals. They can become so concerned with the day-to-day problems of their own operation that, in the extreme, they lose all sight of their original purposes.'
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Last updated:
14 October 2015
Cite this: http://www.findandconnect.gov.au/guide/tas/TE00281
First published by the Find & Connect Web Resource Project for the Commonwealth of Australia, 2011
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