A $33 MILLION federal budget funding boost will see Lifeline centres across the country introduce new technology that handles distressed phone calls, emails and texts in a single system.
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Lifeline Central West chief executive Alex Ferguson welcomed the budget’s recognition of the need to build “soft infrastructure” as well as big-ticket expressways and railways.
He said it brought good news for Australia’s mental health sector and support agencies such as Lifeline.
The funding boost will see Lifeline Australia receive an extra $6 million a year in federal finding for the next three years, plus a “balloon” payment of almost $16 million in the fourth year.
Currently Lifeline receives around $9 million a year.
Mr Ferguson said the money would allow Lifeline to upgrade its telephony systems across the country and to put on paid telephone counsellors to fill gaps in the daily rosters when volunteers were unavailable.
“The volunteer model is great during the daytime and early evening but struggles on the midnight to dawn shift,” Mr Ferguson said.
“And it doesn’t matter which organisation you talk to, volunteers are harder to come by everywhere, particularly a fully trained and quality volunteer pool.
“Going forward you will find Lifeline will be an amalgam of paid counsellors in the difficult hours and the volunteers we have now.”
Mr Ferguson said an updated telephony system would treat phone calls, texts and emails all the same.
“Different generations are using different methods to talk to one and other and to Lifeline,” he said.
“Gen Y is more likely to send a text, those in the middle might email and older people will still pick up the phone.
“A modern call centre has the technology to handle all these contacts in the one system and, of course, along with the cost of buying the new toys comes the cost of training our volunteers.”