Otago Daily Times

‘Just the beginning’ for Escalator graduate

- SALLY RAE

ESCALATOR might be over for Kelly Heckler but she reckons it is ‘‘just the beginning’’ in terms of using what it taught her.

Last month, the AgriWomen’s Developmen­t Trust marked the 100th graduate from its Escalator programme.

The milestone was reached as graduates of the eighth annual programme — including Mrs Heckler — gathered in Wellington.

The 10month programme provides leadership and governance developmen­t to 14 women each year.

It takes a wide approach to developmen­t, providing women with skills and support, and addresses the barriers they could face when engaging in decisionma­king.

Participan­ts come from across the primary industries, including dairy, meat, horticultu­re, arable, wool, wine and honey.

Mrs Heckler is involved with the family farming business at Omakau, has her own farm environmen­tal consultanc­y, AgriBasics, and is the mother to two young daughters.

Seeing other inspiring women — such as Ranfurly farmer Dawn Sangster — was a catalyst for her to apply for the programme, she said.

Mrs Sangster has been a highprofil­e graduate of the course. Five months after graduating from the inaugural programme in 2011, she was elected as a director of Alliance Group and was recently appointed a director of Farmlands.

Mrs Heckler said she had wanted to do the Escalator programme for several years but the timing had not been right.

This year, she decided it was the year to do it and was thrilled to be successful with her applicatio­n.

Seeing the success that Mrs Sangster had, and the confidence she gained from the course, had spurred her on, she said.

Being able to fit it in had been a concern, given her family and work commitment­s.

But in the end, she ‘‘just decided it was worth it’’, although she quipped there were ‘‘definitely a few very limitedsle­ep nights’’.

She had been very fortunate to have family support both from her husband James and their respective parents, which had helped immensely.

It was not just the ‘‘homework’’ between modules that required thinking; there was also constant thought processes involved and that was something that required devoting time to.

Escalator involved five threeday modules in Wellington during the year, the final one involving reflection, goal setting and ‘‘where to next’’.

Among the things that she wanted to get out of it were growing her network, improving her confidence and also her articulati­on.

She was a bigpicture­strategy type of thinker, and on the governance side, she believed she needed to look at that area to maximise her potential.

‘‘At the moment, I’m just waiting until New Year before I decide on what the next step is . . . letting everything sink in,’’ she said.

She now had a clear list of criteria about what she was passionate about and where she believed she could add value.

Her passion was about making farming businesses sustainabl­e for the future. If it was not for her own children, then it would be someone else’s, and farmers needed to be thinking about what they were doing now to make their businesses viable.

There were some big challenges ahead in farming but also some exciting opportunit­ies and it was about getting businesses geared up for making the most of those opportunit­ies. If they did not, then there would be nothing viable to hand to the next generation, she said.

Being involved in the course benefited not only participan­ts’ own businesses, but also the farming industry and their rural communitie­s.

There was a ‘‘massive’’ amount of talent among the women in rural communitie­s and Escalator was ‘‘just peeling the lid off’’.

 ?? PHOTO: HAGEN HOPKINS ?? Escalator graduate Kelly Heckler (second from right) with (from left) Labour MP Kiritapu Allan, AWDT chairwoman Mavis Mullins and Escalator alumni chairwoman Jane Wright.
PHOTO: HAGEN HOPKINS Escalator graduate Kelly Heckler (second from right) with (from left) Labour MP Kiritapu Allan, AWDT chairwoman Mavis Mullins and Escalator alumni chairwoman Jane Wright.

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