Helping ImpacTauranga
Getting education back on track with a new fleet of vans
Students at a Tauranga alternative education programme now have two brand new vans, donated by Trinity Lands.
ImpacTauranga supports young people who have been forced out, or have chosen to leave, mainstream education at Tauranga Girls’, Tauranga Boys’ or Otumoetai colleges. The students attend ImpactTauranga’s education programme Tauranga Youth Academy, where they are supported to set and chase goals, form healthy routines, study towards NCEA, access specialist social worker support and then transition back in to high school, or on to work or training.
“You’ve got no idea what it means for the kids to have two new vans. They feel valued, they feel cared for, they feel supported that – not just us in ImpacTauranga, but – other people in our community love them too and care about them and care enough about them to give them some vans. The kids go: They did this for me?”
Nynette Martin,
ImpacTauranga Manager and Social worker
Community funding neccessary
ImpacTauranga director Russell Turner says community funding is needed to supplement what the government pays for the alternative education programme.
A teacher's viewpoint
Teacher Adam Gardiner says staff spend a lot of time in the vans with the students; chatting about their lives, listening to music.
Trinity Lands CFO Ngaire Scott says it was a “real privilege” to hand over the van keys to the teachers and students at ImpacTauranga.
ImpacTauranga also has a residential facility run under a contract with Oranga Tamariki. It is home to up to five young people. The house opened in 1996, and the alternative education programme was launched the next year.
“We love to partner with people doing amazing work, like yourselves – changing lives, growing lives, improving lives. Life is not always easy and sometimes we need a hand. We count it as a privilege to be able to partner with you.”
Ngaire Scott,
Trinity Lands CFO