Brandon Trust

Not to be confused with Brandon Trost.
Brandon Trust
Formation March 1994 (1994-03)
Type Charitable organization
Legal status Operational
Purpose Learning Disability Support Services
Headquarters Patchway, Bristol
Region served
England
Chair
Bonnie Dean
Chief Executive
Lucy Hurst-Brown
Website www.brandontrust.org

Brandon Trust is a United Kingdom charitable organisation working with and for people with learning disabilities.

Profile

Brandon Trust is an award-winning[1] UK-registered charity working throughout the South West of England and in London, supporting approximately 1,400 people with learning disabilities and autism.

It has more than 2,000 employees[2] and its registered head office[3] is in Patchway, Bristol.

Brandon Trust is licensed to provide services by the Care Quality Commission (Provider ID: 1-101639606). It provides personalised services designed around individual needs, from living solutions to vocational courses, from community and leisure access to employment training and support.

Brandon Trust is a member of the Voluntary Organisations Disability Group (VODG)[4] and the chief executive is Lucy Hurst-Brown, who is a regular contributor to national articles[5][6] relating to social care and learning disabilities.

History

Brandon Trust was formed in 1994 by the merger of the Buttress Trust with the South Avon Housing Association. In April 2000, Spectrum Day Services, previously part of the NHS, was transferred to Brandon Trust. Six years later the charity secured an innovative contract with the Gloucestershire Partnership. The following year, in 2007, Brandon began work in Cornwall, supporting over 90 adults with learning disabilities, all brokered on individual budgets. Its London operations started in November 2012 as part of a full merger with not-for-profit organisation Odyssey Care.

In April 2014, Herefordshire Council awarded a contract to Brandon Trust for the provision of day services for people with learning disabilities in the county.[7]

In August 2015, Brandon Trust opened its first charity shop in Bristol at 2 Cotham Hill with the promise of offering shoppers a different experience from other charity outlets in the area.

From September 2015, Brandon Trust began providing community day support services to adults with learning disabilities and autism in Warwickshire. It followed a Warwickshire County Council tendering process in which Brandon was successfully awarded the contract to run the Sesame Centre in Rugby and the Ramsden Centre in Nuneaton.


Publications

Brandon Trust’s 20th anniversary report Finding Freedom[8] launched at the Learning Disability Today London conference[9] on 27 November 2014, warns that the vast majority of people with learning disabilities remain invisible in our society despite more than 20 years of ‘care in the community.’ Research commissioned by the charity found that 64% of people surveyed said people with learning disabilities were not visible in communities.[10] This is despite an estimated 1.5 million people with learning disabilities living in the UK. Of those who do know someone with a learning disability, just a quarter said they would describe that person as a friend.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Thursday, September 17, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.