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Betty Pedersen
Interviewee:
Betty Pedersen, born 1916
Interviewer: Frank Heimans,
for Baulkham Hills Shire Council
Date of Interview: 8 Aug 2001
Transcription: Catherine Sapir, May, 2006 |
Often
affectionately referred to as Mrs Meals on Wheels, Betty Pedersen is the
longest serving volunteer in the Shire for that organisation. Now 85,
she has had more that sixty years of involvement with community work.
I’ve been
doing volunteer work even before I was married. I had a friend who taught
at Erskineville Primary School and she ran a Girls Club and I used to
go out once a week and help her there and at Forbes I was in the Mother’s
Club at the school and the Ladies Auxiliary and I was in the Country Women’s
Association and I was in the Girl Guides local association and I was very
involved in the Church so I did a lot of work out there.
I
believe even before that time you had some volunteering work during the
War years, wasn’t it?
Oh yes, I
went down to….the Americans opened a centre down in Elizabeth Street in
the city and I used to go there every Sunday for a couple of hours over
the lunch period and help with the meals there. I did help with the nets
that they did for camouflage netting. I did some of that. It was to throw
over the vehicles.
Was
it a sort of a tradition to volunteer in those days?
I think it might have been because a lot of work was done
by volunteers. I mean, the whole of these organisations were volunteers,
there’s no paid people.
So
when did your involvement with Meals on Wheels begin?
Well when
they started to organise the Meals on Wheels - I think the Meals on Wheels
might have been the first service brought into the Shire - they called
for volunteers. So I volunteered. I rang up and said I would be willing
to help with Meals on Wheels. I happened to be on the first day that they
were going out – I was rostered on the first day and from then on I’m
still there.
So
you may have actually done the first delivery?
Oh yes. We only had five meals to deliver, no more, but
now it’s a different matter.
You
made history there, Betty. Who cooked the meals?
We went from
the Harvey Lowe pavilion and they were first cooked by the volunteers,
the ladies on the committee I think they were.
Would
you travel very far to deliver those meals?
Yes, when you do Kellyville we do about 50 kilometres
from the Baulkham Hills Community Centre there and back. Well at the moment
we’re going to a house around the back of Amaroo Raceway. We’ve even been
out further than that. It was all volunteer at that stage. When I was
on the committee and I was President, Secretary and Treasurer and all
the rest of it, quite often I’d be down there two or three days a week
and quite often I’d be called if somebody hadn’t notified them they weren’t
coming to deliver, I’d get a phone call to come - would I mind coming
and taking a meal.
Where
did the actual funding come from?
I think in
the beginning it came from the people who were buying the meals and then
eventually the Government helped out a bit and the Council helped out
a bit. They started to give petrol coupons, the Council. We nearly went
broke. We thought we’d have to close down but the Government came with
this HAT Program and they supply the money now. They have been very helpful.
We haven’t had any problems with them when we have wanted any help.
How
long have you done the Meals on Wheels?
Thirty years.
That’s
quite a commitment for anyone.
Oh yes.
What
benefits do you think have been made to the community by having the Meals
on Wheels service?
Well it allows
them to stay in their home for one thing because they get home help and
the other services too and they get a good decent meal a day which they
probably wouldn’t do for themselves.
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Packing food for Meals on Wheels delivery at Baulkham Hills Community Centre 2004
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you’ve got somebody who hasn’t got any family around or the family is
living away somewhere else, they have the peace of mind knowing mum or
dad’s being looked after, because a lot of them will not move out of their
homes so it keeps them there in their home and makes them happy.
How
many volunteers are still involved with Meals on Wheels?
Say about 15 a day.
Did
you make any friends as a result of your volunteering work?
Oh yes, quite a lot. That’s where most of my friends have
come from. We’ve made quite a few friends.
You
started something, I believe, called the Saturday Club.
They started
that…..a bus goes around and picks about 15 or 16 people up and brings
them to the centre down there. They serve them morning tea and they give
them a midday meal and afternoon tea and then take them home again. They
have easy exercise for them and little games and then in the afternoon
they play bingo. Well I went over for a few years, in time to give them
help with the morning tea. There were two of us on duty then. We’d heat
up the meal and serve the meal and then we’d get their afternoon tea and
that was it. We’d come home.
Looking
back Betty at 30 years of volunteering on Meals on Wheels, plus all the
other volunteering work you did before, what is the main thing you think
you’ve learnt from that experience?
Well one thing you find you’ve got time to do all these
things when you get stuck into it and do it. I suppose there’s self-satisfaction
out of it too.
And
your involvement with Meals on Wheels is still involved with the Kellyville
run?
I do the Kellyville run, yes, once a month. I’m seriously
thinking of giving it up.
Somehow
I don’t think you will Betty.
Don’t you think so?
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