CDC NSW Commits to Partnership to Support Stolen Generations Truth Telling

Leading bus operator CDC NSW has cemented its partnership with Kinchela Boys Home Aboriginal Corporation (KBHAC) during its first KBHAC Mobile Education Centre (MEC) community visit post COVID-19.

The MEC, a converted commuter bus nicknamed ‘Benny’ which features an audio-visual system and printed historical information on Stolen Generations, is the first of its kind and integral to helping KBHAC members tell their stories in a range of locations.

The MEC will be used as a tool of education for schools, for community groups and those who work with Aboriginal people and the Aboriginal community.

Mikhail Mikhail, driver for CDC NSW, steered the MEC to a Healing Session at Aboriginal Health and Medical Research Council (AH&MRC) in Little Bay where it was unveiled to a group of Kinchela Boy’s Home survivors and AH&MRC staff.

The partnership is an important part of CDC NSW’s contributions to causes that assist with reconciliation for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples.

CDC NSW has committed to maintaining and storing the MEC between outings and will also provide KBHAC with drivers to take the bus to different communities across New South Wales.

In turn, KBHAC is assisting CDC NSW by helping it employ more Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander apprentices and staff and provide guidance on maintaining a culturally safe and supportive working environment for them.

KBHAC will also be conducting ongoing cultural awareness training with CDC NSW’s staff.

CDC NSW General Manager for Innovation and Organisational Development, Ravinder Singh, said the partnership was a great way for CDC NSW to use its resources to back a very important cause while helping achieve the company’s reconciliation goals.

“We are very proud and excited about getting involved with Kinchela Boys Home survivors and collaborating with them in getting Benny in tip-top condition, so they can get out there and continue with the healing and reconciliation process,” Mr Singh said.

KBHAC CEO, Dr Tiffany McComsey thanked CDC NSW for kindly agreeing to sponsor the Mobile Education Centre.

“We are very grateful to CDC NSW for agreeing to look after our MEC and ensuring that the bus is road worthy, but also providing us with bus drivers to help be part of this journey and who can help transport this bus where it needs to go is a godsend,” Dr McComsey said.

“We’re hoping it enriches CDC NSW as an organisation and also that the experiences are ones that can be shared with the CDC families of the employees who work there”.

“The stories from KBH are important stories to tell. This bus is very much like a sacred space. When you go inside the bus, you realise you are inside the KBH story,” she said.

“As a small organisation we are so grateful to CDC NSW for providing the oversight and maintenance – we know it is in good hands.”

Kinchela Boys Home Aboriginal Corporation (KBHAC) was established by survivors of Kinchela Aboriginal Boys Training Home (KBH), a ‘home’ run by the NSW Government for over 50 years to house Aboriginal boys forcibly removed from their families.

CDC NSW is a subsidiary of ComfortDelGro Corporation Australia (CDC). In NSW, CDC NSW operates Hillsbus and Forest Coach Lines in Sydney, as well as other regional cities outside of Sydney including Blue Mountains Transit, Hunter Valley Buses, Blanch’s Bus Company on the north coast and CDC Broken Hill.

To find out more about KBHAC Stolen Generation Mobile Education Centre (MEC) visit here.

 

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