Partnership with Ugunga Community Resource Centre
By Sarah Anderson Published in September 2005 When Aggrey Omondi visited Waterloo Region in 2002, he got to know The
By Sarah Anderson Published in September 2005 When Aggrey Omondi visited Waterloo Region in 2002, he got to know The
In February of 2006, when Julian and I were volunteers at the Ugunja Community Resource Centre in Western Kenya, our friend Betty invited us to a harambee fundraiser for her mother. In the morning we arrived to a small house full of women drinking tea and eating homemade donuts, looking smart in their boldly patterned uniforms. This wasn’t your typical bake sale or car wash. It was a harambee. And harambees make me nervous.
A group of mothers, grandmothers and a few men, all farmers, are seated beside me at the Ugunja Community Resource Centre’s Technical Institute. These 40 community members, known as the Change Team, have been attending training in participatory community twice a month for two years. My partner Julian and I arrived in western Kenya to spend five months volunteering, learning and developing the partnership between UCRC and The Working Centre. Today we are attending the Change Team graduation.
The Integrated Circle of Care is a fluid and collaborative approach followed by workers from different agencies weaving through St. John’s Kitchen. Within this approach, staff members from each agency are aware of their specific personal roles. However, the high level of collaboration between workers means that people can approach any worker, without knowing their agency association or specific role, and still receive support – either that worker will support the person directly, or they will introduce the person to another worker who can support the person more appropriately.
This approach makes relationships more natural and support more accessible. Workers from different agencies are easily approachable, meaning that people build relationships with multiple workers. Having relationships with different workers is important to a person’s support – it makes support from a trusted source easy to find, and means that people have a choice of worker to approach in any given situation.
In order to maintain a circle of care around a person, workers from different agencies ask for consent from the person for information to be shared between workers. Continuous communication between workers helps to ensure that people do not fall into gaps between services, and also that services are not duplicated.