Serious concerns about the provision of health care services to meet the needs of rural and regional communities across North East Victoria have been aired at a special meeting of Indigo, Alpine and Towong Shire Councils.
Mayors and councillors from the three municipalities held an historic joint meeting in Beechworth on Tuesday where they voted unanimously to take a united stance to advocate for better health services for the region including a single site hospital built on a greenfield site.
The three councils endorsed several advocacy action items including calling for the governments of Victoria and New South Wales to pause the current redevelopment plans for the Albury Hospital and redirect efforts towards a new single site facility development in either Albury or Wodonga.
Indigo mayor, Sophie Price, said that with the current health care infrastructure plans, the communities of Alpine, Indigo and Towong are genuinely facing the prospect of substandard health services for decades to come.
“If governments do not understand that this issue is at the heart of what our communities want us to advocate for, then they seriously do not understand our communities,” she said.
“Health services are the most important issue for the communities of all three shires and this is far too important for us not to continue to fight for.
Alpine mayor, Cr John Forsyth, said Albury-Wodonga Health is the third largest health service in Victoria, servicing a population base of 300,000 people and yet the funding being put forward by the Victorian government falls well short of what is required to provide the region with quality health care services.
Towong mayor, Cr Andrew Whitehead, gave a personal account of how his young son had to be airlifted to Canberra to get the necessary care required for a broken leg and the impact this had on his family having to travel so far to be by his son’s side.
“To not have a trauma centre that is up to the standard of care that he required in a regional centre the size of Albury-Wodonga is not okay,” Cr Whitehead said.
Indigo councillor, Sue Gold, told the meeting that now is a critical moment in time in that the decisions being made will determine the capacity to respond to the future health care needs of a growing region.
All three mayors agreed there has never been a greater level of collaboration on a single issue, not only between the three councils but also health care professionals and advocates, surrounding councils and the general community.
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This article appeared in the Corryong Courier, 15 August 2024.