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P L UMB I N G CO N N E C T I O N

W I N T E R 2 0 15

1 0 7

Electrician Gary Johnson, from Laser Electrical Orange, and three apprentices

getting briefed by Wyoming farmer Marianne Spooner.

runaway success, and so another trip

was organised in April, this time with 10

apprentices in tow.

Prior to these trips, the Outback Links

program was predominantly made

up of retirees or ‘grey nomads’ with

generalist skills who wanted to make

connections and give something back

as they travelled around the country.

Outback Links currently has about 1,500

volunteers registered with them. Still, a

dire need for skilled workers prevailed,

as did Frontier Services’ desire to inject

some young blood into the program.

Frontier Services national volunteer

program manager Kate Parsons says:

“Our generalist volunteers provide a

great service, but we felt we needed

to put a succession plan in place

and also bring in some volunteers

with specialist skills to provide more

comprehensive assistance.

“For example, one property had a

broken down tractor that had been

sitting in the middle of a field for

around two years. We’d sent numerous

generalist volunteers to the property,

and while they provided invaluable help

in other areas, they were unable to fix

the tractor. On our April trip an NRMA

mechanic was able to get it running in

around 25 minutes.”

Having operational utes and farming

machinery makes a significant difference

to the lives of the farmers. Kate tells of

one farmer who, with only one working

vehicle, had to work during the night so

his wife could use the ute to drive the

children to school during the day.

The apprentices who signed up for the

program were supervised on site at all

times and with an overwhelming show

of support from organisations such as

National Electrical and Communications

Association (NECA, who provided one

supervisor and three apprentices),

NRMA, Supporting And Linking

Tradeswomen (SALT), TAFE Western

and others - there was no shortage of

supervisors to oversee the work.

Although the tradies and apprentices

would work in trade teams and

move from property to property as

needed, Outback Links wanted to

ensure meaningful connections were

established between the tradies and

farmers, so each team would set up

camp on one property and use that as a

base for the duration of the program.

With approximately 20 farmers in

Lightning Ridge putting their hand

up for help on the next Tradie Trip, it

would seem Outback Links is breaking

down the old stereotypes of hardened

farmers who, while in desperate need,

feel too embarrassed or proud to ask

for help.

“Sometimes up to the very moment

we walked through the front door

we needed ways of dealing with that

problem,” Kate says.

“After the November trip, we had

a local coordinator from a nearby

property who put up her hand to talk to

the farmers. She reassured them and

helped them work out wish lists. They

are so resilient and capable that it does

feel really strange for them to ask for

help, so it was really important to have

a local person on board.”

Plans to continue the program look

promising with the solidification of the

team of sponsors such as NECA, NRMA,

SALT and others.

“We’ve got a few grants in the pipeline

for Queensland so our fingers are

crossed,” says Kate.

“We want to continue our work in

NSW, but because Frontier Services is a

national organisation, we want to focus

help other areas of Australia too.”

The volunteers on the Tradie Trip

have all found the experience really

rewarding and said they’d love to come

back and do it again- hopefully they’ll

get the chance to do that soon.

Outback Links

www.outbacklinks.com.au