Policy Council

The COTA Seniors Voice Policy Council consists of a representative group of older people with an active interest in the issues relating to seniors and a commitment to ensuring that seniors have a strong voice in the community.

Policy Council members come from a diverse range of backgrounds including migrant and indigenous communities and veterans and have represented their communities in a variety of ways over many years. All have demonstrated a deep and long-standing commitment to policy development and representation.

For detailed information on the objectives and functions of the Policy Council please see the Terms of Reference.
 
Current Members of the Policy Council are:
 
Anne Megaw
Anne has been a COTA Seniors Voice Board Member since November 1997, and served for two years before being elected to the position of Vice President in 1999 and then President in 2005, after Laurie Fioravanti's death. Anne resumed the Vice Presidency in March 2006. Anne’s interest in Alzheimer's led her to volunteer in 1983 - progressing onto positions as Support Group Leader, Information Officer and Board Member.

Anne has been involved in aged care issues for many years and represented COTA Seniors Voice on several organisations including Aged Care Accreditation Agency Liaison group and Central Consumer Carers Advisory Council of Glenside Campus and Northern Adelaide Mental Health Services.

Anne is also a member of the Policy Council. With her strong interest in policy matters Anne will continue to help COTA Seniors Voice represent the interests of all seniors.

Evelyn O’Loughlin
Evelyn has been involved in aged care service management since 2004, initially as General Manager of the Greek Orthodox Community of South Australia.  An Executive Board member of Multicultural Aged Care since 2005, Evelyn has a keen interest in policy, first developed during her work in the Policy and Planning department of the Children’s Services Office.

Evelyn recognises that older people, especially those from culturally and linguistically diverse backgrounds – have special needs and require particular representation.

Originally a secondary school teacher, Evelyn has worked in a range of Government and private industry management positions and spent 11 years in Europe, working in upmarket tourism management before moving to Hertz Europe’s head office in London

She returned to Australia in 2004 to be closer to her family - and more recently, to have children of her own.

Margaret Kerby Thorburn (Kerby)      
Kerby is a retired registered nurse with many years of experience working with older people. She has extended her interest in meeting and working with older people by becoming one of COTA Seniors Voice's Peer Educators. Kerby also co-ordinates ‘Telecross’ in Kapunda, is a member of her local Neighbourhood Watch, and continues her education through the University of the 3rd Age.

Kerby brings a wealth of knowledge and understanding to the Policy Council and is passionate about issues that affect older people, particularly those affecting people living in rural communities.  

Dennis Cripps
Dennis joined the Policy Council at its February 2008 meeting. He brings a wealth of knowledge about issues that affect older people. Since retiring Dennis has found his life to be very busy. For a number of years he represented Salisbury residents on the Public Housing Tenant Forum and has been a representative on a number of other organisations some of which are;  Royal Air Forces Association, Salisbury Task Force on the Ageing, SA Pensioners, ARPA Broadview, Salisbury Transport Advisory Group, People for Public Transport and Stroke SA among others. Dennis was the 2007 President of the Retired Persons Association and is currently its Vice President.

Dennis is a strong supporter of equal opportunities for women and has a long association as an advocate for public transport and the provision of low cost housing for older people. 

Marj Tripp
Marj has worked with the Aboriginal Community for a major part of her working life and is still committed to working for the betterment of all Aboriginal people and as a member of the COTA Seniors Voice Policy Committee it is her wish that there is equity for all.

Marj is a member of the 'Grannies Group'. This is a group of Indigenous people, mainly grandmothers, who live in metropolitan Adelaide, devoting most of their spare time helping young folk.

The Group is often involved in helping people who have spent or are spending time in gaol; have drug addiction problems; experience frequent rejection when trying to find somewhere to live; are single parents; and come across persistent and acute difficulties in their attempts to find paid employment. With their extensive knowledge of what is going on their community the Group decided that they were not going to sit by and watch the desperate plight of Indigenous children and grandchildren keep getting worse.

The need for support is ever present as the drugs and social behaviour diminish the living standards in the community.

Marj is presently involved in Service Committees being Chair of both Aboriginal Service members and their Dependants and the Aboriginal War Memorial Committee investigating the building of a war memorial in Adelaide. She also works with the Council of Aboriginal Elders producing an Aged Care Directory of Information and Resources. Marj is the recipient of several medals for service to NAIDOC, for being instrumental in the building of an aged care facility, and received a 2000 Centenary Medal.

For the past 25 years Marj has been involved in Aged Care with both the Commonwealth Dept of Ageing and the State HACC unit. Marj still has time to be involved with her fifteen grandchildren and one great grandchild. This is her third time out of retirement.

Joan Stone
Joan is a longstanding member of the COTA Seniors Voice Policy Council, and represents COTA Seniors Voice on the SA Dental Service Consumer Advisory Panel.  Joan came to Council as a member of COPARP, the Council of Pensioners and Retired People.

As the President of the SA Retirement Villages Resident’s Association (SARVRA), Joan has lobbied tirelessly for amendments to the Retirement Villages Act. In 2004 the industry body, Retirement Villages Association, recognised the contribution Joan has made to the industry itself with a commendation at its conference in Adelaide.

Joan was until recently on the Board of COTA SA and a member of the Ministerial Advisory Board on Ageing.

Joan is the chair of the Aged Rights Advocacy Service (ARAS). In recognition of her wide ranging advocacy for older people Joan was one of four finalists in 2005 for Senior Australian of the Year in SA.

In 2008 Joan was awarded Life Membership of COTA Seniors Voice for her outstanding contribution to the organisation.

In 2009 Joan was honoured again through her inclusion in the South Australian Women’s Honour Roll which acknowledges and celebrates South Australian women and their contribution to our society.

 

Ray Edwards
Ray joined the COTA Seniors Voice Policy Council in 2002. He co-chaired the Council with Barbara Garrett until 2004.

Ray is the COTA A National Representative and Director of “The National Return & Disposal of Unwanted Medicines Ltd” the ‘RUM Project’. He is also a committee member of the Low Income Measures Assessment Committee (LIMAC).

Ray has a long history of involvement in community service and brings a wealth of knowledge about issues that affect the older members of our community. He served 15 years with the Rotary Club of Holdfast Bay Inc. from 1981 - 1996.  He held most positions including President and Secretary, and was twice awarded a Paul Harris Fellow award.

He is a member of the Probus Club of Holdfast Bay Inc.for the past 12 years including President.  He also served on the Probus South Pacific Committee of Management as the South Australian representative for a term of 3 years.  
 
 
Garry Hiskey LLB(Adel), LLM (Hons) (Woll)
Garry Hiskey has been a practising lawyer for some 40 years. The last 24 years were spent as a full time stipendiary magistrate. Having retired from full time work in August 2007, Garry continues to be an auxiliary (part time) magistrate and has recently been appointed by the Minister for Aboriginal Affairs as a Conciliator under the APY Land Rights Act. Before appointment as a Magistrate, Garry was for 4 years the senior solicitor for the Aboriginal Legal Rights Movement. As a magistrate Garry played an active role in the Aboriginal Cultural Awareness program for the judiciary and spent 5 years as the circuit magistrate visiting the APY Lands. He completed a part time external Master of Laws dissertation in 2003 through the University of Wollongong on the subject “Understanding Magistrates Work”. He has insight into the issues affecting older members of the community as his mother is ninety two and a resident at a low care residential facility. He seeks to contribute to the development of COTA policies against this background using experience gained through legal practice and observations as a magistrate, as a person known to many members of the Aboriginal community, by using skills in research and analysis gained though post graduate study and by dint of frequent visits to a residential care facility and observation of issues affecting residents in that and other facilities. He continues to be joint editor of the loose leaf service for lawyers “Magistrates Court Practice (SA)”.

Michael (Mick) Curry (B Econ.)
Mick served in the infantry and in the army reserve, and has a long history of support and assistance to returned service men and their families. He has been an active visitor at the Repatriation and Royal Adelaide Hospitals and is the Totally Permanently Incapacitated (TPI) State Visitation Coordinator, managing a team of volunteer who visit metropolitan and country hospitals. Mick represents the TPI Association on two hospital committees and he is a representative on the Consultative Council of Ex Service Organisations.
 
Mick has a professional background in the telecommunications and banking industries, and he has lectured in business skills at the Hobart School of Business. 
 
Mick has a particular interest in health, hospitals and veteran’s issues and will contribute this understanding to the COTA Seniors Voice Policy Council.