A RUATORIA fundraising effort for Eastland Rescue Helicopter Trust has been described as “incredible”.
Organised by Katherine Callaghan and a team of supporters, the event held at Te Puia Springs Golf Club clubhouse raised $25,000 for the trust.
“If we were a bigger region it would have been hundreds of thousands of dollars so we are amazed with what people gave,” Katherine said.
Trust chairman Patrick Willock echoed those words, saying it was “an incredible” effort.
“We were pretty pleased. This is a region with not many people, and not a lot of money, but we all know that if it is not us that is needing the helicopter, it will be one of our whānau.”
The push behind the fundraiser dates back to 2015 when Katherine’s former employer, Westpac Bank, closed its Ruatoria branch.
“Before the branch closed, May was always ‘Choppa Month’ and the bank would do fundraising for the helicopter rescue service,” Katherine said.
“Then a couple of years passed and I and another bank staff member, Pia Sanson, thought, ‘heck, no one has done any fundraising’, so we felt it was time to do something.”
That decision made, the pair booked Te Puia Hot Springs Golf Club clubhouse for a dinner and auction “and then the world went mad”.
“Between the Covid-19 pandemic and various weather events, it got delayed and delayed, but we finally locked it in for November last year.”
The entire community swung in behind them.
“Even those who thought they couldn’t make it were buying tickets because they wanted to support the cause.
“They might have been picked up by the helicopter in the past, or it might have been a family member. The service is a critical connection to every person on the East Coast, so it really sells itself.”
Adding together the $50 ticket sales ($3000), auction ($6500), koha from local whanau and organisations ($500) and the sale of 1500 raffle tickets ($15,000), the fundraising exceeded expectations.
“Radio Ngāti Porou let us use one of their spare bank accounts so all the money was accounted for and there was transparency every step of the way,” she said. “And we were able to donate every penny because of the support from the community.
“As well all the food for the dinner being donated we had fantastic prizes for the auction, from huge fishing chilly bins and a chainsaw to amazing pieces from local artists. It was incredible.”
Just a few months before the Ruatoria fundraiser, Katherine’s own whanaunga, daughter-in-law Ario Rewi, was a patient in a Trust Tairāwhiti Eastland Rescue Helicopter flight to Waikato after a life-threatening medical event.
“When she got home, she said ‘they saved my life, we should do something for them’,” Katherine says.
“I said ‘don’t worry, we’ve got it in hand’, but it really brought home just how critical the rescue service is.”
So it was an especially great feeling when she transferred the $25,000 to the Eastland Helicopter Rescue Trust this month, Katherine said.
“We all know how much it costs to have that helicopter come here and while we could never meet that cost, the community pulled out all the stops to make what contribution they could.
“The only problem is now they want to do it every year.”
$25k for rescue chopper
A109 Light Utility Helicopter flight with mayor Gisborne City from the air in November 2023.
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