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VOCATIONAL TRAINING

Work For Disabled Servicemen CENTRE IN WELLINGTON

Plans for the erection in Wellington of a vocational centre have been approved by the Rehabilitation Board. This first step in the Dominion-wide scheme to enable disabled ex-service-men to return to normal peacetime pursuits has been announced by the chairman of the board, Mr. M. Moolian. It is expected that extensive building operations will be begun within a month, and these will later be reproduced iu the other main centres. The centre would be the result of negotiations between the Rehabilitation Board and the Disabled Servicemen’s Re-establishment League, said Mr. Moohan. It would embody the best features of similar institutions overseas and at the same time would provide additional amenities to meet typical New Zealand conditions.' Disabled men from the last war would be transferred from their present unsuitable workshops to the new accommodation. In many cases teachers would be selected from their midst for this war’s returned men, for they were now fully skilled in the crafts for which provision was being made. Already a number of men had returned from this war who would qualify for instruction, and they would find new hope in the facilities to be provided. Funds Provided. “Cabinet has made substantial funds available for this work,” said Mr. Moohan, “and the Commissioner of Defence Construction has agreed to provide the men and materials as soon as possible. The site selected has been occupied by the Brougham Street tennis courts, near the Basin Reserve. Mr. Edmund Anscombe has instructions to proceed with working drawings, and it is expected that the tender will'be let and work begun within the next few weeks.” The building will be of two stories, the ground floor of reinforced concrete and the upper floor of timber. There will be an elevator, but ramps will replace stairways. The largest area on the ground floor will be the artificial limb department, and this, at first, will probably be the most, important. In addition to the workshop and plaster and leather fitting rooms, there will be provision for the men to practice walking when the limbs are first fitted. This will overcome the embarrassment often felt when wearers are accustoming themselves to the use of the limbs. The walk will be provided with handrails to steady flic first essays, and 'big mirrors will help in gaining a natural - Also on the ground floor will be the important woodwork shop. Other industries to be covered Will include painting, basket-work, leather-work, fabrication of articles from skins and paua shell, and modelling of show window figures, the manufacture of dust shields for locomotive bearings. There will be a spacious entrance vestibule oixming on to a display room with show eases. Nearby will be the administration suite, with surgeons, inspector’s, and interviewing rooms, and a loading and dispatch dock. For those who are unfitted to take up any permanent training there will be a hobbies room, and there will also be a cafeteria, a rest and reading room, sun decks and a bowling green.

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19420813.2.67

Bibliographic details

Dominion, Volume 35, Issue 270, 13 August 1942, Page 6

Word Count
505

VOCATIONAL TRAINING Dominion, Volume 35, Issue 270, 13 August 1942, Page 6

VOCATIONAL TRAINING Dominion, Volume 35, Issue 270, 13 August 1942, Page 6