Altona and Seddon para-badminton administrators recognised in sport disability awards

Sunshine Special Development School teacher Alyshia Clarke shows students dance moves.(Supplied).

Altona’s Duke Trench-Thiedeman and Seddon’s Ian Bridge received recognition in this year’s Victorian Disability Sport and Recreation Awards.

The pair were named as finalists in the Administrator of the Year category.

As the Badminton Oceania coaching and development officer, Mr Bridge has co-ordinated para-badminton camps in South Australia and Victoria and managed players at the Paralympics and the fourth Fazza Dubai International.

Mr Trench Thiedeman received the nomination for his work at the Ability Para Badminton Club.

A new Sunshine dance group for disabled children was also among the finalists in this year’s Victorian Disability Sport and Recreation Awards.

Sunshine Special Development School teacher Alyshia Clarke said the award was an achievement, least of all because Dance 4 All only started in February 2021.

“We are very new and we had to go through lockdown and everything,” she said.

Ms Clarke said there were 30 students in the Sunshine dance group, who lived across the west and had disabilities including intellectual and physical.

She said the groups trained at the Footscray Church of Christ in Gordon Street and the innovative program saw parents travelling up to 45 minutes to have their children attend.

“There is nothing else for them,” Ms Clarke said.

She said Dance 4 All, which is a finalist in the Inclusive Sport, Recreation or Open Space Infrastructure category, was one of the first in the inner-west offering a purpose-designed dance program for students with diverse needs.

Winners will be announced on Tuesday, November 8.

Details: www.dsr.org.au/vdsr-awards

Dora Houpis