Our services are available to whānau from a diverse range of backgrounds, aimed to restore their well-being and enhance their social resiliency.
Our kaimahi take a trauma-informed, non-judgemental, strength-based approach to help strengthen relationships between parents/caregivers and their tamariki.
We aim to educate whānau, develop their parenting skills while focusing on improving all challenges and encouraging intergenerational change, including health, children’s growth and development, learning and relationships.
The Family Start programme offers free, voluntary home visits to support expecting parents and those with pēpi and tamariki (up to 2 years old).
You can self-refer through this website, by email or by calling us. You can also be referred by healthcare or education providers, legal professionals, or community workers.
Family Start empowers whānau to build a strong and positive future for their tamariki. Our focus is on the health, education, safety, and development of your tamaiti.
We achieve this by:
A dedicated Family Start worker will visit you regularly at home, starting with weekly visits. They'll get to know your whānau – you, your partner (if applicable), and your precious tamariki. Together, you'll explore your parenting strengths and identify areas where support might be helpful.
They will also help you get the right health care for your tamaiti, support you to keep your pēpi safe, explain how your pēpi is growing and changing at different ages, and help you work out what you want to achieve, change or improve. Your kaimahi will also make a plan with you to help you get there, offering advice and ideas to help you solve problems.
Read the Family Start brochure for more info.
Maddie was 18 years old when life took an unexpected turn. In her final year of high school, her father passed away and soon after, she found herself pregnant.
Expectant parents and parents of newborn and young children qualify for Family Start. If this is you, you can self-refer using our contact form or get your healthcare professional or community worker to refer you.
You can self-refer by calling us or using the contact form on our website. You can also ask your healthcare professional or community worker to refer you directly. We have a downloadable form you can email or print out if you'd like to refer this way too.
Our Family Start programme is free and voluntary, meaning that you can withdraw at any point with zero consequences.
Our Home-based Family Support programme provides personalised guidance in your own home, helping you build confidence and nuture the potential of your tamariki.
You can self-refer through this website, by email or by calling us. You can also be referred by healthcare or education providers, legal professionals, or community workers.
Our Home-based Family Support service works with parents and caregivers who want to develop and strengthen their parenting skills and confidence, so that their tamariki are able to reach their full potential.
Our social workers visit whānau in their own homes to:
Alongside this, we also aim to support other areas that impact on parenting:
We can support you with goals that you want to work on, as well as offer the Circle of Security Parenting Course one-on-one, in your home. At your place, at your pace.
Read the Home-based Family Support brochure for more info.
How Home-based Family Support Transformed a Survivor's Life and Brought Hope for the Future
You can self-refer by completing the online form, calling us or using the contact form on the Contact Us page. You can also ask your healthcare professional or community worker to refer you directly. We have a downloadable form you can email or print out if you'd like to refer this way too.
A Social Worker will come visit you and your whānau weekly at your own home.
Our Home-based Family Support service is a short to medium term programme (around 6 to 9 months) for parents/ caregivers with tamariki and rangatahi aged up to 18 years.
A community-based justice process that offers victims of a crime the opportunity to address the harm done, and what can be done realistically by the offender to put things right.
You can self-refer through this website, by email or by calling us. You can also be referred by healthcare or education providers, legal professionals, or community workers.
Restorative Justice refers to a process where those affected by an incident of wrongdoing come together in a safe and controlled environment, to share their feelings and opinions truthfully and resolve together how best to deal with its aftermath. The process is called restorative because it is concerned primarily with restoring the dignity and well-being of those harmed by the incident.
We have a contract with the Ministry of Justice and are the only provider in Otago to provide restorative justice services to the Dunedin and Alexandra Courts of Law.
When an offender has pleaded guilty or been found guilty in court, a judge decides if restorative justice should be explored. It is a voluntary process for both the offender and the victim. If the offender is willing to take part, the case will be assessed to see if it is suited to restorative justice. Then the victim will be contacted to ask if they are interested in talking about it with the facilitators.
All referrals to this service come through the court system or police diversion. To find out more about Restorative Justice call 0800 FAM CARE (03 477 0801) or enquire through this website using our contact form.
This service is voluntary, so it can be limited by how willing each party is to participate.
When an offender has pleaded guilty or been found guilty in court, a judge may direct if restorative justice should be explored. If both parties are willing to participate, they will meet separately with our trained facilitators. The facilitators will assess whether or not it is appropriate to continue with a meeting together.