LEAP celebrates 300th graduation

maltahouse

LEAP (Lothians & Edinburgh Abstinence Programme) has celebrated its 300th patient graduation since launching in September 2007.

Gail Richardson, 50, is the 300th patient to complete the three-month, community-based rehabilitation programme. She was congratulated and presented with a certificate by Sarah Boyack MSP for Lothian, at a ceremony last Friday.

LEAP is the first abstinence programme of its type in Scotland, which operates seven days a week and provides structured support for those who want to conquer addictions to substances like alcohol and drugs.

Gail has tried to beat her alcoholism for much of her adult life, having lived through two violent marriages, a failed business, an eviction, homelessness, depression and drug use.

She explained: “I wasn’t happy so I thought rehab might be the answer. It was like a sudden realisation that I had to do it for myself, no-one else would. I had to take responsibility.”

Since being admitted to LEAP last October, Gail said that her life has been transformed thanks to the project. She says: “It has changed my life. It has given me a real focus. From here I will go into supported accommodation and then I hope I can find a permanent housing solution.”

While on the intensive programme, LEAP participants receive clinical medical and therapeutic help as well as support with accommodation, education, training and employment opportunities.

LEAP is funded by NHS Lothian and three local Alcohol Drug Partnerships and is operated in partnership with the City of Edinburgh Council and Access to Industry (Transition). The project is currently seeking a new base.

Sarah Boyack MSP said: “Gail’s graduation today marks the fantastic collaborative work achieved by herself and all of those at LEAP. Well done to everyone involved and I wish Gail well for the future.”

Clinical Lead of LEAP, NHS Lothian, Dr David McCartney, said: “I’m really proud to be celebrating our 300th graduate in our first six years. Although LEAP is a challenging and demanding programme, it really does have long term, positive impact on not just our graduates, but their friends and families too. We recognise that multiple strands of support are required to conquer the often complex and deep-rooted causes of addictions, and we do this by offering services such as one-to-one counselling and self-help groups.

“We know that evidence points towards recovery being more likely where support is ongoing which is why we facilitate help with aspects like jobs and training. Recovery is a long term process and we also provide aftercare for up to two years further consolidating the hard work our patients have put in.”

In September, Friends of Leap, aimed at raising funds for the project, was launched.

LEAP in the dark

Church of Scotland to sell Malta House – LEAP must find new home by January

Campaigners are saddened and bitterly disappointed at news that Lothian and Edinburgh Abstinence Programme (LEAP) is to lose it’s Malta House home. They had hoped that a last-ditch rescue package could be agreed to keep LEAP in Stockbridge, and blame Church of Scotland ‘greed’ for the failure to secure LEAP’s base.

NHS Lothian has leased the Stockbridge building from the Church of Scotland to house LEAP for over five years, but Crossreach – the Church’s social care arm – is selling the property to support it’s own social service provision – and LEAP must now move out of it’s Malta House home by next January.

In a statement issued last week, the Church of Scotland said: “Crossreach, the Social Care Arm of the Church of Scotland, is disappointed that NHS Lothian have not made a bid to purchase Malta House. The indication from NHS Lothian was of a valuation that was significantly below the current market value. The Church of Scotland which has a legal responsibility to be a good steward of its charitable resources is therefore proceeding with a sale to another bidder.

“One of the largest Third Sector care providers in Scotland, CrossReach counts some of the most vulnerable people among its service users. Over the past few years CrossReach has invested heavily in many of its services, particularly in Adult Care, Children and Families and Services to Older People.

“The sale of assets to support new builds and refurbishment of existing services has been an integral part of the strategy to both protect services and secure excellence in service delivery. Failure to achieve the best possible return on the sale of an asset such as Malta House would result in CrossReach’s investment costs being subsidised by its operations, which would not be sustainable, particularly in an already difficult financial climate.

“Peter Bailey, Chief Executive Officer of CrossReach, said: “As a charity the Church of Scotland has a legal responsibility to ensure that it is a good steward of its charitable resources. For the Social Care Council this means that we must use our resources to provide services to support the many vulnerable people throughout Scotland who depend on our  seventy-plus projects.

“The Council was happy to discuss the option of sale with NHS Lothian but sadly the gap between the current market value of Malta House and the level of offer that NHS Lothian indicated they might be able to make in some six months’ time was so significant that the Trustees of the Church of Scotland would not have been acting responsibly by agreeing to delay the sale.

“We wish NHS Lothian LEAP well in the future and welcome the statement that NHS Lothian is confident that they can find suitable accommodation from within their existing buildings that will allow this excellent service to continue.

“The Church of Scotland is disappointed and saddened that NHS Lothian has failed to make a bid for Malta House, but quite clearly the Trustees of the Church of Scotland have a legal duty to protect its charitable assets, something that NHS Lothian are all too aware of. By not going with another purchaser, the Trustees would be failing in their duty to the many hundreds of CrossReach service users in Scotland.

“The Church of Scotland has been pleased to lease Malta House to NHS Lothian since 2007. In 2010 when the lease was renewed it was made clear that a sale would be made when conditions were right, and to that end break points were included in the contract. The Church of Scotland has given NHS Lothian adequate warning of possible sale but remains willing to work closely with LEAP to minimise disruption to service users over the next few months.”

However local campaigners believe that the Church of Scotland could have done much more to support LEAP, and say that greed is driving force behind the sale.

In a lengthy statement, campaigner Tim Birley, who is also LEAP’s Malta Row neighbour, said: “LEAP recently celebrated five years and more than 250 patient graduations in Malta House.  People who have been treated there feel their lives have been saved.  LEAP wanted to stay at Malta House and had been planning to expand.  Malta House provides a secluded environment, yet very accessible: within walking distance of where patients stay, with a local pharmacy and health centre close by.  Unusually for drug rehab, they found a safe, secure and welcoming community, and feel at home.  For more than 100 years Malta House, under the ownership of the Church, has provided a social facility in the heart of Stockbridge.

“In mid-August it emerged that CrossReach (the Church of Scotland Social Care Council) had given six months notice to terminate the lease to LEAP, to sell the property.  This action was explicitly kept secret from the local community.  A bid had been received from a developer; there had been no open marketing of the property, no for sale sign, no inclusion on the Church’s list of properties for sale.  The lease to LEAP had been renewed in 2010 for 5 years, with clauses to terminate included as is standard practice.  LEAP had expected to stay and planned to expand its services there, and NHS Lothian had recently invested £10,000 in the property.

“The Church consulted no-one and made no assessment of the impact on LEAP of its decision.  It is our understanding that no-one from CrossReach even spoke to LEAP until the story was in the Edinburgh Evening News.  Patients and ex-patients asked for a meeting with CrossReach, but this never took place.  Petitions and representations went unanswered; the Moderator said that CrossReach was not in his area of influence, just as he embarked on a week’s tour of CrossReach services.

“What the Church did do, when the campaign grew, was to try to ‘retrofit’ a justification for its actions.  Despite the secrecy of the sale, the Church tried to argue that everyone knew all along that it planned to sell – even people such as Scottish Ministers who had no role in the lease whatsoever.  Clearly everyone did not know: LEAP would not have invested in Malta House had they expected to leave at short notice.  The Chairman of NHS Lothian only found that Malta House was being sold in the course of a Ministerial visit in mid August.

“The Church also argued that all its CrossReach services depended on the sale of Malta House, and circulated this widely throughout its facilities.  Its own reports tell a different story.  Each year CrossReach reports to the General Assembly.  Clearly there was a financial crisis in 2009, when services were closed, staff made redundant and properties sold.  Then a strategy to ensure financial sustainability was put in place, and by May 2011 CrossReach reported that “we will no longer be reliant on the sale of assets to achieve a balanced budget”, and reported on the continued success of this strategy in May 2012.  This picture is confirmed by press reports and by the Church accounts published by OSCR.  These show that the Church as a whole was in substantial surplus over the 5 years 2007-2011, with just one year in deficit: 2009.  (Note that the lease to LEAP was given a 5 year renewal in 2010!)

“So if asset sales are no longer needed, why the need to sell Malta House and sell in a hurry?  We think there are two possible explanations, which may well be linked.  First as stated in the latest press release, “the sale of assets to support new builds and refurbishment of existing services has been an integral part of the strategy”.  This suggests that the sale looks likely to be for building works elsewhere, and not to support the running costs of all of its services.  Second, perhaps the Church simply received an offer to buy which it has found too attractive to refuse?  Greed trumps all.  Why try to put a smokescreen around this?

“The final insult to injury has been the attempt to blame others for what has happened.  In wording worthy of Uriah Heep, Peter Bailey, CEO of CrossReach wrote about LEAP: “we have a great deal of sympathy for the situation they now find themselves in”.  This, from a spokesperson for a landlord choosing to evict a tenant!

“Equally outrageous is the statement that “the Church of Scotland is disappointed and saddened that NHS Lothian has failed to make a bid for Malta House”.  Only under pressure did CrossReach publicly express that it would be willing to listen to offers from the NHS.  Against an impossibly tight timescale for a public body, the NHS started to put together a bid.  As soon as the first hurdle was encountered, the Church pulled the plug on further discussion.  That hurdle was technically over valuations: the NHS is constrained to value the existing building in its existing use, and not take account of the market value of the site.  It would take time and goodwill to close the gap between the offer the Church has from a developer and what public or charitable bodies could raise, and both time and goodwill appear to be missing.  The Church should not blame the NHS when it announced the end of discussion in a press release, and those campaigning had to inform the staff at LEAP!  But that has been par for the course.

“Finally, the Church claims to be: ”willing to work closely with LEAP to minimise disruption to service users over the next few months.”  In fact they have done nothing, and been totally inflexible about any extension of the lease beyond January 2013.

“There is a good side to the story.  When LEAP was set up in Malta House in 2007 it was innovative and pioneering, but also experimental with no assurance of a long-term future.  Five years later it has become established as providing a successful, significant and growing route out of dependency on drink and drugs.  Our campaign has revealed the extent of cross-party political support, its international reputation and above all the moving stories of success by former patients and their families.  During the campaign, the City of Edinburgh Council’s Health, Social Care and Housing Committee passed a motion in support of LEAP and expanding its activities, and NHS Lothian expressed total commitment to LEAP continuing.  It will continue, and we hope be enabled to thrive.

“What has stood out more and more during this campaign has been the wonderful work which Dr David McCartney and his team undertake, and the courage and mutual support of those attending Malta House and their families.  Stories have moved us to tears: the parents who emailed:

as a family member visiting a patient during their stay at LEAP,  Malta House has a seclusion and privacy about it, it also has a garden.  For family members visiting patients it is a special place for us too.  Just to be able to talk and chat in such a lovely, friendly setting puts us at our ease, especially at a difficult time right at the heart of recovery for our loved ones and at a time of real anxiety, fear and desperate hope for us for the future.  Malta House has that effect on us. I wish us all the very best of luck.”

Or the two photos, one of the gaunt youngster, the other of the happy young man he has become, proudly on top of a Scottish hill.  He writes:

After fourteen years as a heroin addict – and with many failed attempts at getting clean – I was referred to Malta House in October 2008. At that time the thought of walking the one mile to and from the accommodation at Randolph Crescent to Malta House seemed absolutely overwhelming.  There was, however, no alternative and I just had to dig in and get on with it.  For me that daily walk became an important aspect of my recovery.  Yesterday I completed my 100th Munro.’

“What has also emerged is the strength of local community spirit.  The character of Stockbridge is already under threat from loss of community facilities, loss of open space, lack of parking, and threats to independent shops.  In this case, people fought to try to keep a drug rehab unit in their midst, seeking and getting political support for this.  This is remarkable in itself.  Over 600 people signed petitions to save Malta House for LEAP.  Not one single voice said “get these people out of here”.  Those campaigning are very grateful for all the support received, fighting a good fight for a noble cause.  We are proud of the values we have sought to defend (in the face of the opposition and apparent indifference of the Church of Scotland).

“As for the Church, it is a very sad day.  When offered a deal by a developer, they could not resist the money, indeed it was clearly the sole focus.  All their claims of principles, their value statements, their advice to others that the purposes of economic activity should be about the disadvantaged, have been shown as hypocrisy to be set aside for immediate financial gain. So the outcome is the classic lose-lose: LEAP is forced to relocate (and there is no other Malta House!); Stockbridge loses a social care facility that has existed from more than 100 years; and the Church shows its lack of compassion and any vestige of Christian ethic.

“How different it could have been.  If the Church did have a long-term plan, and been open about it (as their value statement says they will be), they could have discussed this with LEAP, the City of Edinburgh Council and the local community.  They could have said “We are looking to sell, do you want to put together a bid to buy?”  Then all options could have been explored including purchase by public bodies, charitable foundations or a community buy-out.  The cause is so outstanding that there would have been every chance of the Church getting its money, and of LEAP being able to remain at Malta House.  How sad this was given no chance.

We will miss our neighbours.  We wish them well in their new home, wherever that may be.”

For NHS Lothian, the search is now on for that new home for LEAP.

UPDATE:

Following a meeting this morning, the Church of Scotland has issued the following statement:

‘The Church of Scotland first indicated to NHS Lothian in 2010 our intention to sell Malta House when conditions were right.   Two weeks ago, NHS Lothian completed a valuation of the property.   They then informed the Church that, even if they could put together the funding to make an offer for Malta House in six months’ time, public sector financial regulations would restrict the value of that offer to a sum less than 50% of the valuation to which we are working. 

Given this disparity, and our need to protect our own vital CrossReach services which support many vulnerable people throughout Scotland, we are currently in final negotiations with another potential buyer.

We understand from this potential buyer that the current building will be incorporated into any new development on the site.   However any proposals to that effect will have to go through the normal planning process where members of the local community will have the opportunity to raise concerns. 

NHS Lothian have also indicated to us that they plan to continue with their Lothians and Edinburgh Abstinence Programme (LEAP).   They are confident that they can find suitable accommodation from within their existing buildings that will allow this excellent service to continue.’

 

 

 

Even more to do this weekend …

 The Botanic Gardens will host the Edible Garden Harvest Festival on Sunday from 11am – 5pm.

Come along, see and taste produce from the Edible Grdening Project at the annual harvest festival. There are fun activities, gardening advice, information about harvesting, cooking and storing crops tasters and much more …

For further information telephone 552 7171 or check out the website at www.rbge.org.uk

Also, Lothian and Edinburgh Abstinence Project (LEAP) will be holding their fundrasing Summer Fayre at Malta House tomorrow (Saturday 22 September) from 10am – 4pm.

As you’ll have read on this site LEAP’s future at Malta House is very much in doubt so go along and show your support – while LEAP will continue, it could be your last chance to visit Malta House!

MALTA HOUSE

Six hundred sign up to keep LEAP in Stockbridge

Campaigners hoping to save Malta House for Lothian and Edinburgh Abstinence Programme (LEAP) handed in petitions containing over six hundred signatures to the Church of Scotland this morning. The move comes as talks over the future of the building continue between the Church of Scotland and NHS Lothian, and campaigners could know the fate of Malta House as early as next week.

In a statement issued earlier today, the Save Malta House for LEAP camapign group said: ‘Copies of the Save Malta House for LEAP petition were handed to the Church of Scotland this morning.  More than 600 signatures and heartfelt comments were gathered in less that a fortnight, on-line and on paper in the Stockbridge area.  Copies were addressed to the Moderator, the Secretary to the Council of Assembly (the Church’s Chief Executive), the Chief Executive Officer of CrossReach (the Social Care Council of the Church) and the Church’s Solicitor. Mary Macleod, Depute Solicitor of the Church, received the petition.  She said that a decision on the future of Malta House and the lease to LEAP would not be made today, but probably early next week.

‘The aim of the petition is to secure the future of LEAP at Malta House.  By 7 September, the petition and campaign had encouraged the Church not to commit to immediate sale to a developer, but to enter into discussions about potential purchase by the NHS.  This in itself is a great achievement, for which we commend the Church, but we are clearly not yet out of the woods.  Should such discussions be successful, it would be a ‘win-win’ situation: the Church would raise money from a sale, and LEAP would continue to lease the property.

‘If these discussions do not lead to this ‘win-win’ outcome, the Save Malta House for LEAP campaign will want to know what on earth has gone wrong.  It is not clear why the Church is having difficulty resolving matters.  Initially the Church seemed to have found itself in an uncomfortable and stark choice between financial gain and its social responsibilities.  The current prospect of purchase by the NHS Lothian (potentially through the Edinburgh and Lothian Health Foundation) looks to offer a solution which delivers both: a way forward to the credit of all concerned.

We remain very aware of the efforts and concern of so many people on this issue of such importance.  The outcome has an impact far beyond a local community, on the reputation of the Church, and on all those recognising the importance of LEAP remaining at Malta House and continuing as a beacon of hope for those facing the challenge of dependency on drink and drugs.  The on-line petition is being kept open until the objective of keeping Malta House for LEAP is achieved.’

There are indications that the group and LEAP supportersmay indeed achieve their aim. In a statement on Thursday (6 September), Peter Bailey, Chief Executive Officer and Secretary of the Church of Scotland’s Social Care Council (Crossreach), told the campaigners: “In relation to the NHS LEAP project in Malta House The Social Care Council wishes to reiterate the earlier statement that they wish to be as helpful and as flexible as possible in the current situation relating to LEAP.  To this end they are now able to confirm that representatives of the organisation are in active discussions with NHS Lothian to explore a positive way forward on this matter within the constraints faced by both NHS Lothian and CrossReach.  It would be premature to comment further while these discussions continue.”

LEAP on the hunt for new home

Lothian and Edinburgh Abstinence Programme (LEAP) is on the lookout for a new home following a Church of Scotland decision to terminate the lease of Malta House, LEAP’s base since it was set up five years ago. 

Dr David McCartney, Clinical Lead of LEAP, said: “We can confirm that our landlord, The Church of Scotland, has informed us it is ending the lease of Malta House and that we require to move out by the end of January 2013.

We would like to reassure patients, their families, staff and partners that LEAP will continue to provide treatment to patients with substance dependence problems.

We are sad at the prospect of leaving Malta House as many people have started their recovery from addiction here and it has met our needs very well. We are now exploring with our partners all of our possible options.”

Funded by NHS Lothian and three local Alcohol Drug Partnerships, LEAP has been a real success story since it was launched in September 2007. Operated in partnership with the City of Edinburgh Council, Access to Industry (Transition) and the Serenity Café, LEAP has helped people with alcohol and drug dependencies to transform their lives through a three-month treatment and rehabilitation residential programme. In March this year, Community Safety Minister Roseanna Cunningham (below) visited the Stockbridge-based project to join in celebrations to mark the programme’s 250th ‘graduation’.

In a statement, a Church of Scotland spokesperson explained that the decision not to renew LEAP’s Malta House lease had been ‘difficult’ and was due to financial pressures on the church’s own social care budget.

“We originally leased Malta House to Scottish Ministers, acting on behalf of the NHS Lothian LEAP project, in 2007 for a 2 year period.  This was subsequently extended to 2010, when it was renewed.   At that point Scottish Ministers accepted the renewed lease of Malta House on the full understanding that the building would be sold when it was deemed that the market conditions were right, and to that end there were break points included in the lease.    In June this year, in terms of that lease, we gave six months’ notice of our intention to terminate the lease from January 2013.

“We are pleased that we have been able to support LEAP for many years through the lease of premises at Malta House.   However, we simply cannot afford to continue that support, given the financial pressures which we face in relation to our own vital services to people in need throughout Scotland.   We recognise the good work that LEAP has been doing and we have a great deal of sympathy for the situation they now find themselves in.  We have been trying to find them alternative accommodation in another Church building but have been unable to identify one that meets their needs.  CrossReach (the Church of Scotland’s Social Care Council) would dearly love to continue supporting LEAP but find ourselves simply unable to do so.  We will continue to be as helpful and flexible as possible in managing this unhappy situation.”

The spokesperson added that no final decision about the sale of Malta House has been made, but that the option to sell is ‘actively being pursued.’

A group of concerned neighbours and supporters are mustering support to keep Malta House available to LEAP – visit http://www.facebook.com/SaveMaltaHouseForLeap for more information.

There is an on-line petition to sign and add comments at:

http://www.ipetitions.com/petition/save-malta-house-for-leap/

You need friends: LEAP launches fundraising charity

Malta House
Saturday proved to be an especially happy birthday for a groundbreaking local project when a new charity aimed at raising funds for LEAP, the Lothians and Edinburgh Abstinence Programme, was launched as part of LEAP’s fifth anniversary celebrations. Founders of the Friends of LEAP charity joined graduates, patients and staff at their annual ‘reunion’ event to celebrate the continued success of the innovative service based at Malta House in Stockbridge. 

Set up by a group of dedicated and skilled volunteers, Friends of LEAP will help to raise additional funds for the programme along with managing the donations they receive.

Dr David McCartney, Clinical Lead, LEAP, NHS Lothian, said: “LEAP continues to grow from strength to strength with more and more people successfully completing the programme and going on to live alcohol and drug free lives. We are delighted to see that the Friends of LEAP charity has been established. We welcome their support and I am sure their work will make a significant contribution to the service. All donations we receive are gratefully received and will go directly into catering for the needs of our patients.”

Trustee Alison Hume is one of four volunteers involved in setting up the charity. “Having volunteered at LEAP over the last few years we are delighted to set up Friends of LEAP. We have witnessed the dedication of staff, the high success in patients completing the programme and the impact that this has had not only on their lives but also that of their families and friends and we are delighted to be involved in this way.”

The LEAP programme operates seven days a week for people dependent on substances who want to achieve drug and alcohol-free recovery. There are six elements to LEAP’s three-month treatment and rehabilitation programme. These are:

  • Medical
  • Therapeutic
  • Mutual aid/recovery communities
  • Housing
  • Education, training and employability
  • Aftercare

“More than 500 patients have been admitted to the programme,” added Dr David McCartney. “It’s important we celebrate our achievements and look ahead with positivity in continuing to assist people in the future.”

Launched in September 2007 LEAP is the first programme of its kind in Scotland, and is an innovative partnership between NHS Lothian, the City of Edinburgh Council, Transition (Access to Industry) and the Serenity Café and the Alcohol and Drug Partnerships in Lothian.

You can find out more about LEAP here LEAP webpage

LEAP celebrates 250 success stories

LEAP (Lothians & Edinburgh Abstinence Programme) has celebrated its 250th patient graduation since launching in September 2007. Thirty-four year old Dawn Fee is the 250th patient to complete the three-month, community-based, rehabilitation programme, and Dawn was presented with a certificate by Roseanna Cunningham, Minister for Community Safety, at a ceremony at LEAP’s Malta House base in Stockbridge yesterday.

LEAP, the first abstinence programme of its kind in Scotland, operates seven days a week and provides aftercare support as well as access to self-help groups for people dependent on substances who want to achieve drug and alcohol-free recovery.

Dawn has tried to beat her addiction over the last three years but was unable to address the issues of negative thoughts and constant fear that caused her to drink and use. She started at LEAP in January, and for the first time in eight years she is now hopeful about her future. After more than one detox Dawn says she sought help from LEAP as “I knew what was coming and I didn’t want to die”.

Dawn described LEAP as intense and amazing, saying: “Everything the staff told me just clicked in my head. I learnt about my brain, the disease of addiction, my feelings and how all these things impacted on my drinking. One of the best things LEAP has done for me is introduces me to mutual aid and support groups. I feel safe at LEAP and in those groups.”

Talking about her graduation Dawn said: “I’m delighted to be the 250th patient to have completed the LEAP programme. I’m so thankful to the LEAP team”. Dawn is now very positive about her future. Her commitment to recovery is clear, as she attends the LEAP aftercare programme and six mutual aid meetings each week.

Minister for Community Safety and Legal Affairs Roseanna Cunningham said: “On what is a happy occasion, I congratulate everyone associated with LEAP – staff, volunteers, supporters, current patients and especially today’s graduates who are continuing on their own roads to recovery. I wish them and their families and friends well.”

She went on: “Recovery is a priority for the Scottish Government and it is our firm belief that recovery from drug and alcohol addition, through services such as LEAP, is possible. We are investing £28.6 million for drug treatment and support services in 2012/13, enabling faster access to recovery-focused services that place the individual at the centre of care and treatment. We are ensuring help is there for people who want to access it”.

Dr David McCartney, Clinical Lead of LEAP, NHS Lothian, said: “I’m very proud to be celebrating our 250th graduation as we enter our fifth year. Since the programme began in 2007, I’ve seen the life-changing impact recovery has on our patients and their families. As we reach such milestones, we must recognize the courage and determination of all our graduates, and also the dedication and professionalism of the team I work with. Today’s graduation ceremony is very special for LEAP, Dawn and her family as it marks the end of her treatment and a key point in her recovery”.

LEAP is funded by NHS Lothian and three local Alcohol Drug Partnerships and is operated in partnership with the City of Edinburgh Council, Access to Industry (Transition) and the Serenity Café.