Hyre Support Coordination is registered with the NDIS and delivers support coordination across Reservoir and the broader Darebin area. The team covers Reservoir and surrounding northern suburbs, is currently accepting new participants, and offers a free 30-minute plan review to all new enquiries.
Hyre Support Coordination helps participants understand what their NDIS support coordination funding covers, identify the right providers, and get supports running from the start. Participants come to us when their plan has been approved, but the next step is unclear, or when they have had a coordinator before and want someone who will stay more actively engaged in what is happening. The free 30-minute plan review gives new participants a straight answer about where to begin.
Reservoir is one of Melbourne’s more established northern suburbs, part of the City of Darebin, with a strong and active local community. Disability services, allied health providers, and community mental health supports all operate in the area. Knowing which providers are taking new NDIS referrals, which ones suit a specific goal, and how to get agreements in place is what a support coordinator does.
For those new to the NDIS or working through a first plan, support connection covers the practical steps that often get missed. A support coordinator from our team helps identify suitable services, explains what each funding type covers, and ensures agreements are signed before funding is used.
Coordination of supports extends beyond Level 1. It tracks every service across the plan, follows up when something drops off, and works alongside a health team throughout the plan period. For those managing several services at once, having a single coordinator across everything ensures nothing falls through the cracks.
When needs involve significant clinical complexity or multiple intersecting services, specialist support coordination brings a higher level of expertise. Our team’s backgrounds in mental health nursing and occupational therapy are relevant when coordination needs to work in tandem with clinical care.
NDIS plan review preparation is built into coordinators’ work throughout the plan period. The team tracks goal progress, collects updated reports from providers, and ensures a clear evidence record is ready well before the NDIA conversation.
Support coordination funding is not automatic. The NDIA decides whether to include it based on how much help someone needs to implement their plan. People who are new to the scheme, managing complex or overlapping needs, or who have previously struggled to get services running are more likely to receive it. Those with straightforward plans and strong existing networks sometimes do not.
There are three levels available, and the one included in a plan reflects the complexity level the NDIA has assessed. Hyre Support Coordination delivers all three: Support Connection, Coordination of Supports, and Specialist Support Coordination. Psychosocial recovery coaching can also run alongside coordination within the same plan.
If your plan does not currently include support coordination, that can sometimes be addressed at the next review with the right evidence. The free 30-minute plan review is a good starting point to understand what your current plan covers.
Participants in Darebin’s northern suburbs face coordination challenges specific to the area. These are not unusual situations.
Not every provider in the area has current availability. Wait times vary, and a referral to a provider that cannot take new clients does not move the plan forward. The coordinator knows which services are genuinely available and has backup options ready when the preferred choice has a long wait.
Some participants in Reservoir have been on the NDIS for a long time. Their plan was written to match their situation at the time, but things have since changed. Goals may be different, living arrangements may have shifted, or support needs may have grown. When a plan no longer fits, the coordinator puts together the evidence and requests a review.
Having an approved plan does not mean services are running. Some participants have funding sitting unused because agreements have not been signed or providers have not been contacted. Getting a plan active is one of the first things a coordinator works through.
Some participants have both NDIS funding and support from state-funded mental health services. When two systems are running separately, things can fall between them. A coordinator tracks both sides and makes sure they are working together.
These are some of the practical reasons participants and their families make contact with us.
Reservoir is well connected by public transport, with train stations across the suburb and bus routes linking the area to surrounding suburbs. Where someone lives within Reservoir affects which providers they can realistically get to on a regular basis. The team takes this into account when identifying services.
The suburb has a mix of long-established residential areas and newer parts. Community facilities and local health services are spread across the area, and Edwardes Lake Park is a well-used local space. Knowing what is genuinely accessible close to where someone lives shapes how the team sets up supports.
Reservoir has community sporting clubs, neighbourhood houses, and social programs that are relevant for participants with community participation or social connection goals in their plan. A coordinator can identify which of these fits the plan and help get the participant connected to the right activity.
When a new participant contacts us, the process starts with a plain-language review of the plan, not a long intake form. Here is what the first weeks typically look like:
The team covers Reservoir and the broader northern suburbs of Darebin. Not every part of this region has the same access to services. A provider that can take a new referral quickly in one area may have a longer wait for someone based elsewhere in the northern corridor. The team accounts for this when setting up supports rather than assuming availability is consistent across the area.
Participants in Reservoir can also access services further into the Darebin area and toward Melbourne’s inner north. Referrals are followed through until bookings are confirmed and supports are active.
If you are unsure whether your address is covered, contact our team on 1300 584 877.
There is no fixed schedule that applies to everyone. Contact frequency is based on what is happening in the plan at any given time. Some participants check in regularly each fortnight; others are in touch more often when something needs sorting.
Yes. Family members, carers, and others who play a role in day-to-day life are welcome at meetings. If someone else helps manage appointments or decisions, it often makes sense for them to be part of the conversation from the start.
A plan review can be requested before the scheduled review date if circumstances have changed. The coordinator determines what evidence is needed and prepares a clear case for the NDIA outlining what the plan needs to cover going forward.
Yes. Getting a support coordinator does not mean changing the services already in place. The coordinator works with existing providers and helps fill any gaps in the plan.
If support coordination is not currently funded in your plan, a coordinator can review the plan and advise whether there is a case to request it at the next review. In some situations, it is possible to request an unscheduled review if circumstances have changed significantly.
Yes. A support coordinator and a plan manager have separate roles. The plan manager handles the financial side, processing invoices and tracking the budget. The coordinator focuses on setting up and managing the services themselves. The two work alongside each other and do not duplicate.
Same business day response.
Hyre Support Coordination is currently accepting new participants in Reservoir and across the Darebin area. The free 30-minute plan review is available to anyone who wants to understand what their plan covers before committing to anything.