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Yellow Brick Road Board

Embracing diversity and working together are at the heart of what we do and the Yellow Brick Road board reflects that.

Our board brings together a range of people whose skills and experience help shape our charity.

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Rachel Stephenson

Chair

Nga puhi, Te Kapotai

Rachel Stephenson joined the Board in March 2024 and took up the role of independent Chair. Yellow Brick Road warmly welcomed Rachel, who brings significant experience in governance. She is a highly experienced chair and director and a member of The Institute of Directors.

Rachel is also currently Chair of Kirikiriroa Family Services Trust, Treasurer of Harlequins Rugby Club, Trustee for Community Living Trust and a director of Community Living Limited. She’s previously held governance roles across a large number of NGO and charities.

A registered comprehensive nurse with over 30 years’ experience in the mental health, addictions and disability sectors, with a post grad certificate in management, 15 years’ experience managing and leading health, safety and wellbeing, risk and quality management systems, Rachel’s skills are second to none for Yellow Brick Road. Not to mention her experience in facilitation, training and education.

Rachel holds a deep belief that families need to be supported and resourced to support their loved ones when they experience a mental health or addiction challenge and like so many, she has personal experience of this in her own family, giving insights of the challenges they face.

With her knowledge of Yellow Brick Road (and Schizophrenia Fellowship as it was) she was excited to take up the opportunity to contribute. Her view is that people are born into families nd live in their whānau and communities of choice. As such, we have a duty to resource whānau and communities to promote and achieve total wellbeing for indiviuduals, whānau and communities.

Jacinda Cole

Jacinda has been involved with Yellow Brick Road since returning to New Zealand in 2018, when she was appointed to the Wairarapa Board of Supporting Families NZ.
Prior to this, Jacinda studied law and science and followed a career in structured finance and private banking in Sydney and London. During her time in London she was appointed to the Governance Committees of Rethink Mental Illness, a UK charity focused on supporting people affected by mental illness.
Jacinda’s passion to help those suffering from mental illness stems from seeing her brother battle with Schizophrenia and losing him to this illness. The devastating impact this had on her family means she is very aware of the need to support families of those struggling with mental illness.
Jacinda lives in Martinborough with her young family and is studying Psychology at Victoria University.

Denyse Wilcox

Ko Hikurangi te maunga
Ko Hikurangi te maunga

Ko Waiapu  te awa
Ko Horouta te waka
Ko Uepohatu te hapu
Hei uri ahau no Ngāti Porou

Denyse Wilcox joined us from beautiful Otaki Beach between Wellington and Palmerston North. She comes to us with extensive management experience in health and disability support services and has held a range of general management roles. Great passions in her work have included working with families/whānau and children and young people in the foster care system, developing strategies as part of a wider group for Māori with an intellectual disability and building capacity and capability of the individuals and teams she’s worked alongside. Choosing to step away from full time employment in 2019, Denyse is currently self-employed in the health and disability sector and is also a registered and practicing celebrant. Her interest in Te Wahāpuahoaho comes from the focus on families and the mission and values of the organisation

Sam Rodney-Hudson

Sam’s relationship with YBR originates with a Schizophrenia Fellowship (UK) scholarship in 1996 to study family work, and further involvement through board memberships, supervision and fieldwork for Supporting Families Central Otago in the early 2000s. She is a registered mental health nurse with over 25 years of experience in mental health settings, GP clinics and whānau services. She is currently the Director of Programmes and Partnerships and Mental Health Lead at Melon Health – a digital health company based in Aotearoa. With these roles, Sam brings a working knowledge of the health sector, new technologies to support staff and whānau and experience in implementation.
Sam and her whānau divide their time between Wānaka and Aotea (Great Barrier Island) – the ocean and the bush are essential parts of her life, with surfing and rat trapping taking equal priority.

Mike Hines

Mike Hines hails from Christchurch but now lives in Upper Hutt with his wife and young daughter.

Mike brings wide experience and qualifications to Yellow Brick Road that are invaluable, particularly for keeping a business check on the operation. He has a commerce degree from the University of Canterbury and completed an MBA from Massey University and is a member of the Institute of Directors. He has wide business experience spanning more than 20 years, through his own businesses of varying sizes and in different industries.

He currently runs an IT firm with offices in both Wairarapa and Wellington, which is how he came to be in contact with Yellow Brick Road.

Mike loves the mahi of Yellow Brick Road and is excited about sustainably building the network of support through whānau and community. His passion is people and he sees this opportunity as a way to contribute to a growing organisation with purpose and aspiration.

How we are making a difference

Our purpose is to inspire and equip whānau to restore themselves, by supporting their journeys from a place of distress to one of mental wellbeing. 

We’re not just in the business of building resilience. We actively walk alongside the people we support, through all their challenges till the wellbeing of their whānau is restored. 

Yellow Brick Road makes a difference by providing support, information, education and advocacy services, including:

 

  • 1-on-1 and group support sessions
  • Innovative mental health and wellbeing programmes for adults, tamariki and rangatahi.
  • Advocacy, for when whānau find it difficult to access the services they need.
  • Family peer support groups
  • Suicidal distress & postvention support
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