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Your Voice Matters: The Future of Day Care in Argyll & Bute
Share Your Voice Matters: The Future of Day Care in Argyll & Bute on FacebookShare Your Voice Matters: The Future of Day Care in Argyll & Bute on TwitterShare Your Voice Matters: The Future of Day Care in Argyll & Bute on LinkedinEmail Your Voice Matters: The Future of Day Care in Argyll & Bute link
Day Services in Argyll & Bute – What’s Happening?
Why are we talking about day services?
Day services cost a lot to run, and at the moment they are not sustainable unless changes are made. We must look at different options for the future. We are not required by law to run day services in the same way we must run other social work services, like assessments and public protection. This is why we need to think carefully about what happens next.
What has happened so far?
A review of day services was recently completed. The review showed that day care and support for older adults in Argyll & Bute are at a turning point. It also showed that:
Communities have changing needs
Some people need different types of support, especially people living with dementia and their carers
Many groups that help older adults also struggle with long‑term funding
Costs have gone up since COVID‑19, and money is tighter
The review looked at research, people’s experiences, and feedback from staff and service providers.
What day services do we have now?
We run three older adult day services:
On Bute
In Cowal
In Oban
We also pay for part of a service in Garelochhead.
Our own day services have been used mainly for respite since COVID‑19. We want to explore whether running them differently could make them sustainable. We also want to work with communities to see if day centres could be used in new ways.
What options are being looked at?
Option 1: Close adult day services
If this went ahead, a consultation would run until 30 April 2026 and a report would go to the IJB on 27 May 2026.
Option 2: Make day services more financially sustainable
This means changing how day services run and moving towards using day centres as wider community spaces. If enough evidence supports this option by March 2026, we can ask the IJB to make a decision in March 2026.
Option 3: Close the day services that cannot be made sustainable
Services that can become sustainable or have less resource in their area may stay open, while other care and respite options would be explored for each community. We don't currently run day services in all localities.
Not all areas are the same. Some places have fewer services, so a day service may still be needed if it can work towards sustainability.
What do we want to learn from you?
We want to understand:
How closing or changing day services would affect people who use the services
How this might affect unpaid carers, families, and communities
How any changes in services or fees might affect you
Ideas for how day centres could be used as wider community spaces in the future
We will share the results of the day services review with the IJB and with everyone taking part in this engagement.
Day services cost a lot to run, and at the moment they are not sustainable unless changes are made. We must look at different options for the future. We are not required by law to run day services in the same way we must run other social work services, like assessments and public protection. This is why we need to think carefully about what happens next.
What has happened so far?
A review of day services was recently completed. The review showed that day care and support for older adults in Argyll & Bute are at a turning point. It also showed that:
Communities have changing needs
Some people need different types of support, especially people living with dementia and their carers
Many groups that help older adults also struggle with long‑term funding
Costs have gone up since COVID‑19, and money is tighter
The review looked at research, people’s experiences, and feedback from staff and service providers.
What day services do we have now?
We run three older adult day services:
On Bute
In Cowal
In Oban
We also pay for part of a service in Garelochhead.
Our own day services have been used mainly for respite since COVID‑19. We want to explore whether running them differently could make them sustainable. We also want to work with communities to see if day centres could be used in new ways.
What options are being looked at?
Option 1: Close adult day services
If this went ahead, a consultation would run until 30 April 2026 and a report would go to the IJB on 27 May 2026.
Option 2: Make day services more financially sustainable
This means changing how day services run and moving towards using day centres as wider community spaces. If enough evidence supports this option by March 2026, we can ask the IJB to make a decision in March 2026.
Option 3: Close the day services that cannot be made sustainable
Services that can become sustainable or have less resource in their area may stay open, while other care and respite options would be explored for each community. We don't currently run day services in all localities.
Not all areas are the same. Some places have fewer services, so a day service may still be needed if it can work towards sustainability.
What do we want to learn from you?
We want to understand:
How closing or changing day services would affect people who use the services
How this might affect unpaid carers, families, and communities
How any changes in services or fees might affect you
Ideas for how day centres could be used as wider community spaces in the future
We will share the results of the day services review with the IJB and with everyone taking part in this engagement.
Share Engagement Update: taking a short pause on FacebookShare Engagement Update: taking a short pause on TwitterShare Engagement Update: taking a short pause on LinkedinEmail Engagement Update: taking a short pause link
As we approach the Scottish Parliament Election on 7 May 2026, we are following the Scottish Government’s official pre‑election guidance for public bodies. This guidance asks organisations to pause external public activity and communications during the election period to ensure neutrality and avoid competing for public attention.
This means our engagement activity will take a short break. During this time, we’ll continue our work behind the scenes, including analysing the valuable input we’ve already received. However, we won’t be sharing updates or publishing new material until the election period has ended.
The good news? Once we’re back, we’ll be ready to share the results and re‑engage with you and keep the momentum going.
Thank you for your understanding, and we’ll see you soon after the election period concludes.
Take care, from the team!
As we approach the Scottish Parliament Election on 7 May 2026, we are following the Scottish Government’s official pre‑election guidance for public bodies. This guidance asks organisations to pause external public activity and communications during the election period to ensure neutrality and avoid competing for public attention.
This means our engagement activity will take a short break. During this time, we’ll continue our work behind the scenes, including analysing the valuable input we’ve already received. However, we won’t be sharing updates or publishing new material until the election period has ended.
The good news? Once we’re back, we’ll be ready to share the results and re‑engage with you and keep the momentum going.
Thank you for your understanding, and we’ll see you soon after the election period concludes.
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The drop in sessions for general consultation will be held at the following venues between 10am-12pm and 1pm-3pm.
If you use a service or have a specific interest in a service we may wish to talk to you directly about that.
Date
Area
Location
9 February
Oban
Studio Theatre, Corran Halls
11 February
Helensburgh
Community Room, Civic Centre, 38 E Clyde Street, Helensburgh, G84 7PG
11 February
Rothesay
The Bank of Ideas, 17 High Street, Rothesay, PA207UG
13 February
Dunoon
Old Library, Queens Hall, 9 Argyll Street, Dunoon, PA23 7HH
13 February
Lochgilphead
Room 5, Lochgilphead Education Community Centre, Manse Brae, Lochgilphead, PA31 8QX
16 February
Campbeltown
Conference Room, Aqualibrium, Campbeltown
We will run our online sessions in the evening and will post these soon!
The drop in sessions for general consultation will be held at the following venues between 10am-12pm and 1pm-3pm.
If you use a service or have a specific interest in a service we may wish to talk to you directly about that.
Date
Area
Location
9 February
Oban
Studio Theatre, Corran Halls
11 February
Helensburgh
Community Room, Civic Centre, 38 E Clyde Street, Helensburgh, G84 7PG
11 February
Rothesay
The Bank of Ideas, 17 High Street, Rothesay, PA207UG
13 February
Dunoon
Old Library, Queens Hall, 9 Argyll Street, Dunoon, PA23 7HH
13 February
Lochgilphead
Room 5, Lochgilphead Education Community Centre, Manse Brae, Lochgilphead, PA31 8QX
16 February
Campbeltown
Conference Room, Aqualibrium, Campbeltown
We will run our online sessions in the evening and will post these soon!
Page last updated: 26 Mar 2026, 03:06 PM
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Lifecycle
Open
Your Voice Matters: The Future of Day Care in Argyll & Bute is currently at this stage
This consultation is open for contributions.
Under Review
this is an upcoming stage for Your Voice Matters: The Future of Day Care in Argyll & Bute
Contributions to this consultation are closed for evaluation and review. The project team will report back on key outcomes.
Final report
this is an upcoming stage for Your Voice Matters: The Future of Day Care in Argyll & Bute
The final outcomes of the consultation are documented here. This may include a summary of all contributions collected as well as recommendations for future action.