Board of directors
The QNADA board is comprised of representatives from member organisations.
Genevieve Sinclair (Chairperson) is the current Manager of Youth Empowered Towards Independence (YETI). YETI is a small non-government agency with a mission to provide a community-based, empowering, supportive, responsive, and healing environment that meets the needs of vulnerable young people through the provision of holistic services that foster social, emotional, spiritual, and physical wellbeing.
Genevieve has been in this role for over 11 years and has worked in the community and university research sectors for the past 22 years. Genevieve has two Bachelor of Arts degrees (Cultural Studies and Youth Work), and a Diploma in Community Services.
Nicola Hayes (Deputy Chair) is the Head of Services at QuIHN. Nicola has worked for QuIHN in a range of positions for over 15 years. QuIHN provides a range of health services to people who use or have used substance use, as well as their friends, families and members of the community who are or have been touched or affected by substance use. QuIHN operates from a harm reduction and evidence-based framework.
Nicola has extensive experience in the Human Services industry in the private, government, and non-government sectors. She has worked in a variety of roles including direct service delivery, policy development, quality management and has held various senior management positions, both in Australia and Ireland.
Trevor Hallewell (Director) has been involved in the community-based not-for-profit field for over 40 years. He has extensive experience in governance issues for community-based organisations. In 2005, whilst being the program manager at We Help Ourselves (WHOS), he was instrumental in the establishment of a 26-bed Therapeutic Community on the Sunshine Coast, and a Day Program in Nambour, providing pre and post treatment services for Sunshine Coast participants.
Trevor was one of the foundation committee members that oversaw the establishment of QNADA in 2007 and has served continuously as a board member ever since, he was QNADA President between 2013 and 2018. In 2019 Trevor was awarded the ATCA “Significant Contribution to Development” award for his contribution to Therapeutic Communities in Australian and New Zealand.
He also has extensive experience in the corporate sector implementing corporate infrastructure, establishing Incorporated Associations, and developing risk management policies and procedures.
Bernice Smith (Director) is the CEO of Goldbridge Rehabilitation Services in Southport on the Gold Coast. She started at Goldbridge in 2010 as Operations Manager and has spent over 30 years working in the Health and Community services sector in Queensland. She has an ongoing commitment to the values of integrity, respect, community belonging, empowerment and compassion.
Bernice has a Bachelor of Social Services, Diploma AOD; Cert IV in Workplace Training, and AOD training with the Gestalt Association of QLD. She was a member of the Steering Committee for the Drug and Alcohol Summit held in 2001 and a member of the Qld Taskforce Committee for Child Protection. Bernice is also a member of the ATCA Board. She undertook Therapeutic Community (TC) Standards training with ATCA in 2013 in 2014 and led the Goldbridge project to obtain ISO 9001:2008 quality standards. She participated in the new ATCA Standards training course conducted in 2018.
Harriet Crisp (Director) is the current State Manager AOD (Queensland) for The Salvation Army, with AOD services in Mt Isa, Townsville, Brisbane, and Gold Coast. A variety of services are offered, including, residential withdrawal, residential rehabilitation, and community programs. She began in the role in June 2020 and has lead the change in model of care for the Queensland services.
Having worked in both the non-government and government sector in NZ, UK and Australia, Harriet has spent the last 15 years widening her experience in the areas of criminal justice, education, mental health and AOD, in both frontline and management roles. Harriet holds an MBA, Honours in Social Sciences (Psychology), and a Diploma in Community Services.
Ailsa Lively (Director) is a Gunganji woman from the Yarrabah Aboriginal Community in Queensland. She has lived most of her life in the Yarrabah Community and is very passionate about assisting her community to become self sustainable.
Ailsa is currently the Chief Executive Officer of the Gindaja Treatment & Healing Indigenous Corporation in Yarrabah and has held this position since January 2008, is a member of the Qld Indigenous Substance Misuse Council and also held the position of Chair for 3 years in this time also.
Ailsa is a firm believer in empowering others and community succession planning to ensure she is assisting others to achieve their goals through passing on of skills and to ensure her community is prepared for the future.
Anna Macklin (Director) is currently General Manager, Service Development and Impact for the Australian Community Support Organisation (ACSO). She has extensive experience in strategic business and practice review; service implementation, organisational service design, policy development, program and project management and research. Anna has worked within the public sector for over 15 years, the academic sector for over 5 years as well as owning and running her own research consultancy business and entered the not-forprofit. Anna completed her Doctorate in Criminology in 2012. Throughout her career, Anna has been recognized as an innovative, ethical, proactive and strategic practitioner, with a clear ability to create positive impact. Anna is married with two teenaged children and if time permits, loves to curl up with a good book of any genre.
Julie Dignan (Director) is the Director Data & Quality for Lives Lived Well. Julie has worked for LLW and its previous merger partner Gold Coast Drug Council for more than 20 years in management positions, and has been instrumental in the organisation’s growth.
Julie holds a Bachelor Social Science, and MBA – as well as specific training in Governance, WHS, Diploma in Quality Auditing, and Diploma AOD/Mental Health. She is passionate about data, research, technology innovation and continuous quality improvement.
Julie has previously served on a number of boards of community service organisations on the Gold Coast.
Richard Norman (Director) is the Clinical and Service Development Manager with Drug ARM. He has worked for the organisation for 15 years but brings over 30 years’ experience of frontline service delivery including working as an dual diagnosis worker in hospital mental health units and as alcohol and other drug counsellor across a variety of community-based programs. Richard has extensive health services management experience including management of methadone clinics, student placement programs, state and national management roles, and recently as Acting CEO of Drug ARM. He was the inaugural Chair of Drug ARM’s Internal Policy Committee and Internal Clinical Governance Committee, and currently sits on the Executive of Alcohol Change Australia.
Richard is an award-winning qualified trainer with experience delivering trainings across sectors including government, non-government, corporate and not for profit sectors. His training expertise on a range of issues including, alcohol and other drugs, mental health, suicide intervention, de-escalation, trauma, dual diagnosis, and professional boundaries. Richard’s practice framework merges Bio-psychosocial and Recovery orientated approaches with harm minimisation and evidenced informed treatment practices.
Peter Hayton’s (Director) trade as a psychologist started 25 years ago, his work in the AOD sector started around 20 years ago on moving to Brisbane. Most significantly the AOD support services Peter was involved in increased when pioneering a charity based program in North Brisbane working with disadvantaged young people and vulnerable adults.
After the 10 years working in the charity sector Peter moved to join the founding team at The Banyans in 2016, a residential program in the Samford Valley, then in 2021 additional outpatient services in Bowen Hills. Peter worked as the Founding Clinical Director of The Banyans for 8 years.
Most recently Peter’s AOD work continues with outpatient services for individual patients as well as consulting with the newly developed Sana Health Group, current owners of The Banyans and the sister facilities; Palladium Private at Sunshine Coast, Byron Private at Byron Bay, and South Pacific Private in Sydney. All centres providing AOD treatment programs across a variety of patient cohorts. Peter’s current work with Sana Health and other organisations is in the area of AOD and Mental Health treatment program design, quality and safety, and associated accreditations. The team at The Banyans continues to grow from strength to strength opening a second residential facility in early 2024.