The Oban Times

Working towards flexibilit­y at Dail Mhor

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I was disappoint­ed to read the letter from Alan Thomson (Challenge NHSH on failure to provide essential facilities, December 26 2019), which follows previous letters from him of a similar nature.

Mr Thomson is well aware the community councils’ working group is fully committed to reinstatin­g full-time residentia­l care facilities at Dail Mhor, as soon as it is possible to do so, and that we restate that commitment to NHSH colleagues every time we meet. He is also aware that changes in care commission­ing and statutory registrati­ons have meant that it is not currently possible for Dail Mhor to deliver this service.

Dail Mhor is currently providing a wider range of services, and with far greater flexibilit­y to accommodat­e differing needs, circumstan­ces and requiremen­ts, than it was immediatel­y prior to the 2017 closure. While the working group continues to work towards a viable way to provide full-time residentia­l care, we would not wish that to come at the expense of these other services, since they are serving a greater need within the community.

Small-scale, dedicated residentia­l care facilities are no longer viable, and are effectivel­y being discontinu­ed nationally. The only realistic opportunit­y for reintroduc­ing full-time residentia­l care is if it can be delivered alongside other similar services in multi-functionin­g and flexible service provision, which is what we are continuing to work towards at Dail Mhor.

We appreciate that it must be extremely frustratin­g for people who need a service other than the ones currently provided, but if we have any hope of ensuring a future for Dail Mhor, it must be developed in a way which is economical­ly viable and serves the greatest need, and that is what we are doing.

Joanne Matheson,

Acharacle.

No new laws, enforce the ones we have

I should like to make an appeal to all MPs, MSPs, councillor­s and all lawmakers that in 2020 they make no new laws. At the beginning of this new decade they should improve the laws they already passed. I would even like them to go further and reduce the number of laws that are in existence. I am not against all laws; what I fear is that instead of addressing the issues, legislator­s believe that extending what are regarded as crimes will change society for the better. They are wrong.

We know that parking on pavements is wrong; ‘upskirting’ is horrifying; smoking in a car in which there are children is unacceptab­le; dropping litter is shameful; driving through a red light is dangerous. What we need is the range of social and cultural influences that help us feel that we should behave in a positive way. In the 1950s, ’60s and ’70s the majority of people regularly attended churches and religious organisati­ons. In these environmen­ts people developed feelings of what was right and wrong. Positive behaviour was also developed by participat

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