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North Wales charity helps grandmother, 80, get benefits
North Wales charity helps grandmother, 80, get benefits

Rhyl Journal

time6 days ago

  • Health
  • Rhyl Journal

North Wales charity helps grandmother, 80, get benefits

Judith Williams, 80, from Penrhyn Bay, received support from the organisation after a fall at her home led to the discovery. The not-for-profit organisation, which supports people over 60 living in private homes, has helped clients secure £1 million in unclaimed benefits. Mrs Williams said: "I fell by the gate trying to bring the bin in. "I fell backwards, and two ladies who were passing, one was actually a paramedic, helped me up. "They insisted I went to A&E because I had banged my head. "The following day the neighbour across the road advised me to phone Conwy and Denbighshire Care & Repair." Caseworkers helped Mrs Williams secure the higher-rate Attendance Allowance of £110.40 per week. The charity also fitted rails at the front and back doors, on the stairs, in the hall, porch, and downstairs toilet. Mrs Williams, a former music teacher at Ysgol John Bright in Llandudno, said: "You lose confidence after a fall, so having the rails helps, it makes me feel safer. "I can't bend then come back up without feeling breathless and dizzy, so it's important to have the rails to hold onto. "The bathroom is just transformed now, it's fabulous. "It has a walk-in shower and handrails to help me. "Without all their help, I don't know how many falls I would have had. "The workers who came here were brilliant, and every night they were cleaning up after themselves, I didn't have to do a thing." Amanda Derbyshire, her caseworker, said: "It all helps with independence and staying at home, which is what we all want. "It's about staying at home as long as possible, staying somewhere where you want to be." The charity also contacted NHS falls teams, helped the couple apply for a Blue Badge, and arranged for the fire service to check and replace their smoke alarms. Ms Derbyshire said many people do not realise they are eligible for the Attendance Allowance. She said: "The Attendance Allowance is a non-means-tested disability benefit for people of state pension age and they can claim for it if they're having difficulties with day-to-day personal care tasks. "A lot of people don't want to see themselves as disabled or having difficulties but I always say it's worth applying, because it can open the doors to other things such as Pension Credit." Lynda Colwell, chief officer of Conwy and Denbighshire Care & Repair, said: "We help them access the benefits they are entitled to, which can significantly improve their quality of life and reduce feelings of isolation and loneliness."

Keeping Pūhoi Bohemia alive through song and dance
Keeping Pūhoi Bohemia alive through song and dance

RNZ News

time29-06-2025

  • Entertainment
  • RNZ News

Keeping Pūhoi Bohemia alive through song and dance

history life and society 36 minutes ago There are small pockets globally where descendants of 19th century immigrants are working to retain the distinctive culture, heritage and language of the small European regions their ancestors came from. They don't come much smaller than the village of Puhoi, north of Tamaki Makaurau Auckland. It was here in 1863, 83 immigrants from Bohemia, in the now-Czech Republic, established a community. They endured much hardship, but they also seemed to know how to party. Song, rhyme and dance have been key to their cultural preservation. A treasury of unique folk songs sung in the Deitsch language has been gathered together, in the Massey University Press published book After Winter Comes Summer. The songs have been painstakingly rebuilt through interviews with descendants, research into European folk song and transcriptions of varied recordings. Packed full of photographs and characters, the book is described as a case study of the development and growth of a small colonial New Zealand village. After Winter Comes Summer is the work of the late Judith Williams, Dr Ralf Heimrath and our guest on Culture 101 Dr Roger Buckton. Roger Buckton has been a Puhoi resident and a professor of music at the University of Canterbury, lecturing in ethno-music. An even better qualification for the job is that Roger plays the medieval Bohemian bagpipes. He plays for us in Otautahi Christchurch on Culture 101.

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