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Harry McLean
Interviewee:
Harry McLean, born 1922
Interviewer: Frank Heimans,
for Baulkham Hills Shire Council
Date of Interview: 20 Aug 2001
Transcription: Catherine Sapir, May, 2006 |
Harry
McLean is a volunteer of the Hills Community Health Care’s Advisory committee
with a hands on approach to volunteering. He has many inspiring stories
to tell.
I
joined the Bushfire Brigade in 1951 then I took on all sorts of other
volunteering work and I found that it was pretty good for me but when
my wife died I took on more volunteering because I can’t understand people
retiring and sitting at home.
Now
Harry I believe you did some volunteering work for the police. Could you
tell me about that?
Yes, I did
a fair bit for them over the last 10 years. What we did, we decided that
they needed a mobile police station. We went for a 22 seater bus and converted
it and took most of the seats out and put in computers and phones and
even a TV, so that it was really just like a small police station. It
did well, they were happy, the second day I think it was in operation
there was a fatal accident up on Windsor Road and they cleared it all
up in half a day where it used to take them two days to do that.
Another
task that you did and it involved the police again was you were on the
community aid panel.
I enjoyed
that really because the community aid panel runs like this, that if a
person commits a crime and is caught, and it was mainly shoplifting but
there were others as well, and it was their first offence and they pleaded
guilty, then they come before a community aid panel which took the load
off the courts because the community aid panel consisted of a solicitor,
who volunteered his time, a policeman and a policewoman and then there
was me representing the community and then we’d read the charge that the
person had and then you’d ask them questions why it occurred and see if
you could find out the reason and so on and then you’d send them out of
the room and then talk among yourselves.
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Harry McLean with Baulkham Hills Area Health Centre display c2000
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idea was that you would all have to agree as to what the penalty should
be and it had to be all community work. You couldn’t get them to do work
for private people because you could see the problem there. That was interesting
because I could see people who were stretching the truth a fair bit, but
there was others that would come up that you could see obviously needed
something.
You
also set up some courses for nurses.
That was
with the Rural and Volunteer Fire Fighters Association of which I was
the Secretary and Treasurer of , for years, and there was no severely
burnt training course available in Australia at that time and any nurses
that wanted to undergo special training had to go to either America or
London to do it and some of them were doing that because of the necessity
of it. So, me and another fella, we went down to the University of Sydney
and saw the professor there about setting up a special course in training
severely burnt people and they were happy to do it and they went along
and did it but the idea was that you had to be a qualified nursing sister
before you could do the course so you knew all your nursing activities.
It was a two year course if you did it part time or a one year course
if you did it full time. Now to do it we needed around $84,000 to put
those nurses through on that full time course. Anyhow, we raised the money
and put them through the course and quite a few of them worked over at
the Concord Hospital and now they’ve got a full unit where they’d look
after severely burnt people and they’ve got the best success rate in the
whole world which includes America and England and the lot. Now so much
so that I got a letter a few years back from a doctor from the Children’s
Hospital who said that they were very interested in it in England and
France and they wanted to know more and get on to it and do some more
which they have done since.
Now
this is in use in France and England, you said, the technique of treating
people. Do you feel proud of that Harry?
Oh well,
yes, but as I say I don’t think that it is anything out of the ordinary.
I mean, lots of people would do it if they got the chance and lots of
people are more capable of doing it than I am. But as I always say, I
get more out of volunteering that I put into it.
Has
it enriched your life being a volunteer?
I reckon
so, yes. Certainly enriched the latter part of my life because I’ve found
through my volunteering that the things I didn’t think I’d be able to
do and wouldn’t be so much interested in, turned out to be the best because
of my lack of knowledge in the first place.
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