Four new trustees have been appointed to the Lake District Calvert Trust.
The charity has announced that Louise Dunn, Judith Gate, Emily Flynn and Victoria Notman have joined the charity.
Louise is a communications consultant and academic with over 25 years’ experience of management and leadership roles in the pharmaceutical industry and at Alder Hey Children’s NHS Foundation Trust and Charity.
Louise said: “As a Keswick resident, I’m delighted to be able to get involved with this extraordinary organisation, that has such a positive impact for people living with disabilities in our community and all over the UK. I am looking forward to learning more about how I can help the team and contributing to their exciting plans for the future.”
Judith has extensive experience in the charity and public sectors including leading the volunteering and customer care functions for a national charity.
She currently leads a Continuous Improvement programme with a focus on delivering efficiency and improved customer experience through business process improvement and digital transformation.
Judith said: “I applied to be trustee because I wanted to use my skills to deliver as much positive impact as possible. As an outdoor enthusiast I feel a genuine connection to the Calvert Trust’s mission of making outdoor activity accessible to everyone.
“I am really excited to join the board and look forward to using my knowledge and experience to help support the Trust achieve its ambitions over the coming years.”
Emily has over 21 years’ experience as a military officer and communications-electronics engineer across a wide spectrum of business areas including: senior leadership/board-level management; digital optimisation; resource planning; engineering, operations and risk management; trusteeship and mountaineering leadership.
Emily said: “I am delighted to become a trustee of the Lake District Calvert Trust. The military introduced me to the benefits of outdoor education as a means of expanding personal confidence and stretching comfort zones in a controlled environment.
“It also led me to become a mountaineer. I hope to be able to bring my previous experience as a leader, mountaineer, engineer and trustee to help the Calvert Trust continue to deliver amazing outdoor education to its participants and to help it grow over the next few years.”
Victoria is legal director at the employment team at Burnetts Solicitors in Carlisle and has over 20 years’ experience as an employment lawyer.
She also has a first-class honours degree in physiotherapy and experience in the rehabilitation and development of adults and young people with mild to severe physical and mental impairments and learning needs.
Victoria said: “I am looking forward to applying my knowledge and skills to become integrated into the fabric of the trust to such a degree that all the experience I have to offer can really make a difference to the lives and happiness of those accessing Calvert Lakes and Calvert Reconnections.”
Giles Mounsey-Heysham, chairman of the trustees, said: “After a detailed recruitment process, we are delighted to welcome our new trustees.
“Together they bring a wealth of skills, experience and shared passion to the Lake District Calvert Trust. We welcome their contributions moving forward.”
The Lake District Calvert Trust has been supporting people with disabilities from its specialist Calvert Lakes residential centre and accessible riding centre near Keswick in the Lake District for almost forty-five years.
Calvert Lakes has grown from being the UK’s first dedicated activity centre for people with disabilities, to welcoming around 3,500 visitors to stay each year. These include individuals, family groups, specialist schools, accessible sports clubs, disability charity groups, supported living organisations and care homes across the UK.
Last year, the charity also opened Calvert Reconnections, the UK’s first residential brain injury rehabilitation programme combining traditional clinical therapies with physical activity in the outdoors.