david63 wrote:Sadly, Ray, these days there are so many obstacles put in the way and so many hurdles for volunteers to jump over that many just can't be bothered
Talk about hurdles and hoops.
Before my dear lady retired, she was the administrator of the Macmillan Team up here in Moray and before that in the Highlands. Her main office was located within the Macmillan Hospice within the town and she had a secondary one in the main hospital where she organised the chemotherapy clinics.
Maureen was in at the start, as part of the management team, in building the hospice which was funded totally by local donations.
When she retired a year ago, the hospice manger wanted her to come back to work as a volunteer so that they could continue to use her admin skills. After discussions with Macmillan and the Health Board they advised that she should wait a year before returning so that the bulk of the patients which she had looked after would have been replaced by new ones, thus safeguarding her against any accusation under data protection. This seemed like a reasonable request.
However, when she decided to return, the NHS told the hospice that she would have to be vetted under the Police Scotland Act and numerous other Acts to see if she was a suitable person to work within the hospice. The chairman of the health board, who we know, reported this to the board but was told by his officials that although they knew Maureen, her work and her background they could make no exceptions. This vetting has taken three months, tied up in bureaucracy, but has finally been resolved. She now returns one day a week to teach the volunteers.