`If you don`t accept treatment, you may lose your
Transcription
`If you don`t accept treatment, you may lose your
Independent voice for community/voluntary sector Issue five, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org VIEW ‘If you don’t accept treatment, you may lose your benefits’ Addiction help charity hits out at welfare threat pages 4, 5 VIEW VIEW, Issue four, five, 2012 2012 Standing firm Website: viewdigital.org CONTENTS Page 2 Charity jump Pages 6-7 A campaigner tells his story and we look at the latest developments in fight against human trafficking Page 13 Frances A Burscough (left) talks about her fears as she agrees to do a parachute jump for charity The £1m ladies Bicycle power Pages 8-9 VIEW visits a Concern shop in Newcastle to hear how a remarkable bunch of women volunteers have raised more than £1m Pages16-17 VIEW takes a look at the upcoming Maracycle by recounting the story of one rider and his memory of doing it back in 1985 End this abuse Banking on us VIEW, Issue five, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Profile We talk to Avila Kilmurray, Director of the Community Foundation, about the various challenges facing her organisation 1, How has the organisation changed since it was set up in 1979? It has changed in terms of the range of grant-making programmes that it manages and it has also evolved with European Union funding. It has also developed the ability to manage funds on behalf of donors. 2, What are your main areas of responsibility? I’m responsible for the strategic overview of the organisation and managing both our development programmes which do work within local communities and our grant-making programmes. I also try to ensure that we attract new donors to the organisation. 3, When did you take on the position of director and how has your role changed, if at all? I took on the role of director in 1994. when the Community Foundation was better known as the Northern Ireland Voluntary Trust. At that stage most of my role would have been taken up in direct grant-making and assessing applications for grants. It has changed in that we now have a much wider range of grant-making and development programmes. Pages 10-11 JacquiMontgomery-Devlin (above) talks about Barnardo’s fight against child sexual exploitation in Northern Ireland Page 23 Director of Operations Jonathan McAlpin (above) talks about the role of the Ulster Community Investment Trust Editorial VIEW, the online publication for the community/voluntary sector in Northern Ireland. A s we await on the Assembly to debate the Welfare Reform Bill, we know one thing for certain that the Coalition Government has endorsed the most ‘radical’ shake-up of the benefits system for years. Critics opposed to the measures have describe it as an ‘ideological assault’. A recent development in this ongoing process has been the signalling of an intention to cut benefits for unemployed alcohol and drug addicts if they refuse treatment. The idea of axing the benefits was raised recently in a speech by the Works and Pensions Secretary, Iain Duncan Smith Those who would have little sympathy for addicts will argue that it’s a good idea and will mean that people suffering from an addiction will get treatment – even if they don’t want it – and in the long run, this is a good idea. The problem with that approach, as argued in VIEW this month by a leading charity in the field, Addiction NI, is that it won’t help addicts, and could also exasperate their condition. Niamh Eastwood, the chief executive of the charity Release, said: “Iain Duncan Smith’s proposal is tantamount to coercive treatment.” Martin Barnes, the chief executive of DrugScope, said was no evidence to suggest that “using the stick of benefit sanctions” would help people engage with treatment and aid recovery. And Simon Antrobus, the chief executive of Addaction – one of the UK's largest specialist drug and alcohol treatment charities – said people could 4, Can you briefly outline your vision for the Community Foundation. My vision is that we hold onto our well-established ethos of seeing ourselves as an organisation within the community sector and that we keep working with groups in the most disadvantaged areas. We also want to work as a catalyst or convenor between the needs of those areas and people with the interest and funding to actually be prepared to make a difference. 5, How secure financially is the Community Foundation? The Community Foundation is reasonably secure in that it has an independent endowment of some £12 million. It does not, unlike most community and voluntary organisations, receive core funding from government. 6, Who or what has been the inspiration for you in your career to date? By Brian Pelan, editor not be forced into abstinence. Since the Assembly has not debated the Welfare Reform Bill, we don’t know for sure that this measure will come into effect in Northern Ireland. But we do know that the Department for Social Development in Northern Ireland recently carried out its own consultation on the Coalition’s Welfare Reform Bill. It said: “The Northern Ireland Assembly has devolved responsibility for social security but in practice this is delivered on the long standing principle of parity, i.e. an individual in Northern Ireland will receive the same benefits and be subject to the same conditions as an individual elsewhere in the UK.” Charities and addicts have cause for concern. Alternative formats – audio, DAISY, mp3, braille, large print or Word document of anything can be produced by: RNIB NI Accessible Media. T: 028 9050 1888 E: amni@rnib.org.uk W: www.accessiblemedia.co.uk Page 3 The first director of the Northern Ireland Voluntary Trust, Hugh Frazer, was a very inspirational individual. It was he, along with the first chair of the Trust David Cook, who set a very clear mission and ethos for the Community Foundation that we have maintained. My personal inspiration has always been Cathy Harkin, a woman who is now long dead and who I worked with back in Derry in the 1970s. She was a feminist and founder of Derry Women’s Aid. She had an amazing mental agility to be able to link issues between trade union and social issues. 7, Given the cutbacks in funding from Government, are you confident that the community sector can survive and thrive in the years ahead? No, I’m not confident. I think that because of the way funding has been available for the community sector from the mid 1990s until the mid 2000s, there has been an increasing dependance on statutory and EU funding – both of those sources are simultaneously being cut. There has also been an increase in dependance on paid workers. And while Challenges: Avila Kilmurray they clearly in some cases are necessary, it has meant that the initial voluntary activist base of community has dissipated somewhat. I think there is a challenge in terms of the community sector finding new ways of activism, particularly in relation to young people. That may mean the community sector has to change. 8, Is the Government doing enough to help the community sector? I think the government, particularly the devolved assembly, has an acute awareness of the importance of the community sector. One of the problems is that the government has got to tied up in audit accountability and bureaucracy. The funding that is available could go a lot further if it was managed in a more flexible manner. We are in favour of transparency and accountability, but I think the art of bean counting has become to complex. 9, What role does philanthropy play in the current economic climate? I think philanthropy is extremely important. As wealth has decreased in some areas, there is a more acute identification with the need for some sense of social solidarity. What is disappointing is that alongside the economic recession there appears to be a greater divergence between extreme wealth and increasing poverty. Philanthropy is important, but it should not be posed in opposition ‘My own personal inspiration was feminist Cathy Harkin, who was the founder of Derry Women’s Aid’ to the role of the State and the public sector. It can only ever be complimentary and indeed, fill gaps. 10, What do you enjoy most about leading the organisation? I enjoy the sense of commitment that I get from the people who work in the organisation and that all our board trustees are volunteers. I also enjoy the diversity because community action is constantly changing. We see new communities coming in, such as the Roma community, so that the issues that are thrown up are always changing, so that keeps you responsive 11, What are the main frustrations you encounter in your role as director of Community Foundation? My main frustrations are where you find a block in terms of people’s awareness about the very real and pressing needs on the ground, where people sometimes appear to be living in parallel universes. You are constantly looking for ways to communicate that, yes, there is a real opportunity for people to help and make a difference. 12, How do you relax and what are your other interests? I like poetry and writing. I’m convinced, but nobody else is, that I have a novel inside me somewhere. VIEW, Issue four, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Page 4 VIEW, Issue five, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Page 5 ‘It’s like something from Victorian era’ Journalist Lucy Gollogly reports on the strong reaction from several charities after the Work and Pensions Secretary in the Coalition Government, Iain Duncan Smith, signalled that unemployed addicts could see their benefits cut if they refuse treatment C oalition Government proposals to cut the benefits of suspected alcoholics or drug addicts if they refuse treatment have been described as “like something from the Victoria era” by a leading Northern Ireland addiction charity. Dr Claire Armstrong, the director of Addiction NI, was responding to plans which may allow Job Centre Plus staff to cut the jobseekers’ allowance of claimants who reject treatment. If implemented, the rules would come into force in October 2013, when the new universal credit system is introduced. The Department for Social Development in Northern Ireland recently carried out its own consultation on the Coalition’s Welfare Reform Bill. It said: “The Northern Ireland Assembly has devolved responsibility for social security but in practice this is delivered on the long standing principle of parity, i.e. an individual in Northern Ireland will receive the same benefits and be subject to the same conditions as an individual elsewhere in the UK.” A Welfare Reform Bill for Northern Ireland is expected to be introduced in the Assembly in the coming months. Dr Claire Armstrong said she would be deeply concerned if the Coalition Government’s proposals were to be introduced here. “We believe that people need support to seek treatment – this would essentially be like a punishment. And we also believe that addiction – alcohol and drugs problems – should be seen as a health issue and I don’t think this is helpful where there are genuine health issues for people,” she said. The Addiction NI director said a punitive approach like the one being considered could be counter-productive. “You want to encourage people to seek help in a very positive way, so they’re making that Concerned: Dr Claire Armstrong, director of Addiction NI decision at an early stage to prevent either physical or psychological damage further down the line. “That means that you need to have a menu of different options for people, right through from advice, brief interventions, all the way through to intensive treatment or even residential treatment if that’s what someone requires. “So there isn’t a one-size-fits-all approach for this – it’s a very individual thing. “The thing that we find working on the front line in the addiction world in the voluntary sector is the timing of somebody’s decision to seek help is really, really important. What we would really like to see is people being encour- aged to seek help themselves in a positive way and this kind of proposal is really the opposite of that. “It’s all about working with the person rather than saying, ‘if you don’t go to treatment we’re going to take your money off you’.” Dr Armstrong also said she is worried about how benefits sanctions would affect the claimant’s dependents. “It’s not just an individual who is affected by an alcohol or drug problem, it’s the family, and it’s children. “And for someone to be a position where their benefits are being reduced, what impact is that having on the wider family, what impact does that have on children in the family? “For quite a simplistic looking punitive measure, how many other people are being affected by that? How many children are losing money from within their home because of that, when they’re already in a difficult position? I don’t think that would be positive at all.” She added: “I think the answer to this is focusing on the treatment side of it and the health aspects of it rather than this (proposal). I find it unbelievable really – it’s like something from the Victoria era almost.” Dr Armstrong’s concerns mirror the position of many addiction charities in Britain. One of the largest, Addaction, said the policy could jeopardise addicts’ recovery. Meanwhile another major charity, DrugScope, has called on the Coalition Government to clarify its position on the introduction of sanctions for refusing treatment. ‘We believe that people need support to seek treatment – this would essentially be like a punishment’ Addiction NI has been working since 1978 to provide support and treatment to people affected by alcohol or drug addiction. They have centres in south, east and west Belfast and treat people from all over Northern Ireland. As a registered charity, they do not charge for treatment sessions. Website: http://addictionni.com/ Counselling: Addiction NI have centres right across Northern Ireland Iain Duncan-Smith, left, ‘The outdated benefits system fails to get people off drugs and put their lives on track. We have started changing how addicts are supported, but we must go further to actively take on the devastation that drugs and alcohol can cause’ VIEW, Issue four, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Page 6 Campaign to end human trafficking in Northern Ireland steps up a gear VIEW, Issue five, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Why I got involved in the fight Page 7 By Pete Kernoghan – a member of No More Traffik On Our Streets – a human trafficking awareness campaign Image: Laura Curran Standing firm: Young people outside Belfast City Hall during the recent No more Traffik week A ssembly efforts to tackle Human Trafficking in Northern Ireland has stepped up a gear with the launch of an All Party group on Human Trafficking (APGHT) recently. The group was established to promote effective action against trafficking for sexual and labour exploitation, an increasing problem across in Northern Ireland. Adults and children are known to be trafficked here for sexual exploitation, for various forms of labour exploitation and for criminal activity, including illegal drug production, fraud and theft. Grainne Teggart of Amnesty International, an adviser to the Assembly group, said: ‘’Human trafficking and the exploitation which follows are egregious violations of human rights. The problem has been growing in scale in Northern Ireland in recent years and the new All Party Group shows that it will get the political attention it deserves. The all party group will be considering possible changes to the law here and how to better coordinate efforts across government and between statutory and non-statutory agencies.” The APGHT has been operational since February and has had presentations from numerous organisations including, PSNI, Department of Justice and NI Human Rights Commission. At a meeting this month, MLAs will consider a work A step forward: Anna Lo, chair of the new all-party group at the Assembly Image: Aaron McCracken, Harrison Photography programme which will detail the specifics of the work our MLAs will undertake. This has been drafted by Ms Teggart, who said: A focussed work programme, will serve to promote effective action against trafficking for sexual and labour exploitation in Northern Ireland. Shared learning with the other devolved administrations and European networks will feature as part of this and will contribute to our understanding of this problem to help focus our thinking.’’ The Public Prosecution Service and NI Com- Image: Laura Curran mission for Children and Young People (NICCY) will also be present at the meeting. The new Assembly group aims to tackle the problem through awareness-raising, building co-operation with parliamentary counterparts in England, Scotland, Wales and Republic of Ireland and by monitoring and advocating changes in law, policy and practice. Ms Teggart, Adviser and Secretariat to the group, said: “Human Trafficking is a complex issue and therefore requires joint working on coordination and prevention measures. Coordination between all party groups across the UK will be important. To signal this joint working Baroness ButlerSloss, co-chair of APPG on Human Trafficking at Westminster and Anthony Steen, former MP and founder of UK Human Trafficking Foundation which services the APPG at Westminster, spoke at the launch on the scale of the problem and how we move forward together.’’ Anna Lo MLA, chair of the All Party Group, said: “Today is a great step forward in our fight against human trafficking. Assembly members from all parties are committed to making Northern Ireland a hostile place for traffickers. We will proactively address gaps in our systems here to bring about the change that is needed to end this modern day slavery.’’ I n November 2006 I was in Pattaya, Thailand, with a band I played in called Bluetree. Pattaya was such a culture shock for a middle class boy from Belfast like myself. I had never experienced something as extreme as this place. It was a small place but it had more than 30,000 female prostitutes. That figure did not include the children that were available to buy and exploit. As we drove around the city we passed a beach where our guide told us this was the place where people bought and sold children. That was a turning point in my life. I came home completely shocked to the core. All that ran around inside my head was ‘I need to do something about this’. So myself and Aaron Boyd, another member of the band, set up a charity that helped tackle child sex exploitation in Cambodia. We raised money and awareness as we toured with the band. We were able to put money into some projects in Cambodia. But that was not enough for me, this issue had captured me, I began to read more about it, talk more about it, and as time went on I began to see what a massive problem it was becoming in my own country. It is one thing to tackle the issue of human trafficking on the other side of the globe but it is something different in knowing that it also happens in your home city. It was easy for me to disconnect what happens in South East Asia from my everyday life. As I got to understand what was happening here my whole perspective changed. It is completely different to think that some of the people I walked past on the street may be here against their will and may be being forced to do things they do not want to do. Since I was a kid I hated when things were not fair. The issue of human trafficking is an extreme form of this; people with power who are taking advantage of people and that is just not fair. In November 2011, I told two friends of mine, Stephen and Shemek, about this issue that faces Northern Ireland. They got the same feeling that I had. We helped to set up No More Traffick On Our Streets. Last month we had more than 20 events in Belfast to raise awareness about human trafficking. • For more information go to http://www.nomoretraffik.com/ VIEW, Issue four, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Page 8 Salute the ladies Brian Pelan talks to a group of volunteers at the Concern shop in Newcastle, Co Down, after they raised £1 million for the charity T HE mist and rain swept over Newcastle on the day I visited the Concern charity shop on Main Street in the Co Down town. But, inside the premises and away from the drenched streets, the warmth of the volunteers was evident. They say that one of the secrets of any business – big or small – is team effort. The Concern team that I met have this ingredient in abundance. Amidst the racks of clothes – of all shapes and sizes – on display and various pieces of bric-a-brac on the shelves, the sound of constant laughter rang throughout the small shop as the volunteers kept themselves busy and smiling as they served customers. Pauline O’Neill, who is from Newcastle, has worked in the shop for 17 years. “Concern opened a shop in the town in 1992 and I started there. We then moved, after about two years, to our present premises. “It’s all teamwork here,” said Pauline. “There are a few good reasons why we have been successful. Firstly, the shop is in a good location in the town; secondly, many of the clothes and other items donated are of good quality; and finally, the customers who come in love to have a bit of craic with the volunteers. Nettie Halyburton, originally from Lanarkshire in Scotland, has lived in Northern Ireland for more than 33 years. She echoed Pauline’s sentiments. “We all really enjoy working with each other. There is great camaraderie amongst us.” All of the volunteers expressed their delight at the news that the Concern shop has now raised £1 million since it first opened its doors. “We’ll just keep on going,” says Pauline. “This shop also represents our social life.” ‘It is a great shop to work in and the girls all really love the voluntary work’ According to an article in The Democrat newspaper in 1992, businesswoman Nelly Hill decided to do something after she, along with countless others, watched the unfolding horror of the famine in Somalia on her TV. She opened a temporary charity shop in aid of Concern on the Newcastle promenade. Her gesture sparked a huge reaction from members of the public in the town and further afield. Donations of clothing and other items poured into the shop. And what was meant to be a temporary shop became a permanent fixture in the town. The business developed so rapidly that the Concern volunteers had to move to their present premises at the Newcastle Shopping Centre. Pay a visit to the shop the next time you are in Newcastle.You are sure to appreciate the charm of the lovely ladies who work for Concern. • Concern Worldwide works with the world’s poorest people to transform their lives. They are an international humanitarian organisation dedicated to tackling poverty and suffering in the world’s poorest countries. http://www.concern.net/en Teamwork: Volunteer Nette Halyburton (left), with Concern fundraiser Claire Fitzsimons, and volunteers Liz Balie, Anne Gelston, Margaret Scullion, Pauline O’Neill and Mary Guthrie VIEW, Issue five, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org who raised £1m Page 9 VIEW, Issue four, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Page 10 VIEW, Issue five, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Page 11 Lifting the lid on child sex exploitation In the wake of the convictions of several men in England over the sexual exploitation of children and young women, Brian Pelan spoke to Jacqui Montgomery-Devlin, Children’s Services Manager at Barnardo’s Northern Ireland, about the extent of the problem here T HE manager of Barnardo’s Safe Choices NI, Jacqui Montgomery-Devlin, said in a recent statement to the media that sexual exploitation is happening in “every town and city across Northern Ireland”. Her shocking statement followed the jailing of nine men who ran a child sexual exploitation ring in the greater Manchester area. I met with Ms Montgomery-Devlin recently to find out more details about the scale of the problem in Northern Ireland. Tucked away up a leafy lane in east Belfast, Jacqui met with me in her office, part of a Barnardo’s complex, and outlined some grim statistics about the issue of child sex exploitation, which the charity is actively challenging. “We are often asked the question is this happening in Northern Ireland?” said Jacqui. “And I sometimes forget that our services have been in existence for almost 12 years. We exist to work with children and young people who are being sexually exploited, at risk of exploitation, going missing from home and care homes. “So, is it happening here? Yes, because our services here are in existence to work with those young people. We have two practitioners who have ‘We need to have more prevention and awareness programmes offered to these young people, as well as their parents’ Support the online petition by Barnardo’s calling for the NI Policing Board to incorporate child protection, including sexual exploitation, as a priority in the forthcoming Policing Plans. We are encouraging members of the public to show their support by signing up online at www.barnardos.org.uk/cutthemfree full caseloads. We have 36 children and young people on the waiting list, from across all five health trusts. A mixture of those on the waiting list are with their families or are in care homes. At one stage, we were just funded to work with children in care. But we have more funding now and that allows us to work with children outside of the care system as well. “A lot of young people end up in care because they are being sexually exploited and all the associated risks and vulnerabilities that go with that. If we can start working with them in the early stages when they are at risk of sexual exploitation we can perhaps prevent them going into care. The majority of those on the waiting list are known to social services in some way. “A lot of the time we are dealing with very damaged individuals. For the last few years, we have been trying to say, particularly to social workers, to try and get referrals in on young people sooner rather than later, because once they are entrenched in to that kind of lifestyle – I’m not saying they are to blame in any way – but once those perpetrators have got them entrenched, it can be very difficult to get them out. “It’s better if can get in contact with them earlier. We need more prevention and awareness Raising awareness: Jacqui Montgomery-Devlin, Children’s Sevices Manager, Barnardo’s Safe Choices Northern Ireland programmes offered to these young people, as well as their parents. “The majority of these young people do not recognise what is happening to them as sexual exploitation. They don’t often see themselves as victims. It’s up to the adults working with them or who they are living with to notice or identify what is happening and to try and get them some help. We want to go into schools as well. There has been a recent opening in that area. Last week I had a meeting with a teacher who is responsible for pastoral care in one school. He wants us to talk to his pupils, aged 16 and over. “As part of the research titled ‘Not A World Away’, we looked at children and young people who were in the care system and those known to social workers. A 2010 ‘Young Life And Times’ survey was used to determine the prevalence of sexually exploitative experiences among the general youth population in Northern Ireland. A total of 786 16-year-olds completed the survey (two-thirds female, one-third male). “One in nine said they had experienced sexual exploitation or had been groomed or targeted in some way. The majority of them said this happened under the age of consent. The majority of them also hadn't told anybody.” “Funding is an issue in how we tackle this problem. The fact is that we now have 36 young people on our waiting list. That waiting list only started during the research. We have two practitioners for the whole of Northern Ireland, we are going to recruit two and a half more – but that’s with Barnardo’s voluntary funds. “We also receive funding from Comic Relief and the Heath and Social Care Board. “Barnardo’s chief executive Anne Marie Carrie says that sexual exploitation happens in every town and city in the UK. “We need child protection to be part of the Policing Plan here as a priority so that targets are set and resources made available. “In Northern Ireland, we don't have any specific guidance for social services about child sex exploitation and how you deal with it, in the way that Wales, England and Scotland have. Jacqui believes the decision to set up the Safeguarding Board in Northern Ireland shortly, which will be chaired by Hugh Connor, is a welcome development. “No one agency can tackle this on their own,” she said – “it’s a partnership approach. “A lot of the kids who we are working with have had so much trauma in their life as a child. At the start a lot of these kids in care go missing every day. If we get them to a stage where it’s once a week or once a month that is a success. The focus also needs to be on the perpetrators who remain at large and invisible. “Two of the young people that we are just finishing working with now are ending on a really positive note “One was with us for nearly three years, the other about 18 months. They don’t seem to be at risk now. They are functioning in a more healthier and positive way. “That is real success given their backgrounds and what they have been through. “One young person said to one of our workers some time ago: ‘Me being raped is like you making a cup of tea.’ She was trying to indicate to us that it was a regular occurrence in her life.” VIEW, Issue four, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Page 12 VIEW, Issue five, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Page 13 MOORE STEPHENS Serving the Northern Ireland business community for over 130 years, Moore Stephens is a dynamic firm offering a wide variety of business services and solutions. • Accountancy & Audit, • Taxation Services, • Charity & Not for Profit Specialists, • Consultancy & Business Advice, • Wealth Management Offices in: 4th Floor, Donegall House, 7 Donegall Square North, Belfast BT1 5GB Tel: 028 903 29481 Fax 028 904 39185 Email: belf@msca.co.uk 32 Lodge Road, Coleraine, BT52 1NB Tel: 028 703 52171 Fax: 028 703 58419 Email: cole@msca.co.uk 21/23 Clarendon Street, Derry/Londonderry BT48 7EP Tel: 028 712 61020 Fax: 028 713 60005 Email: city@msca.co.uk 3 High Street, Larne, BT40 1JN Tel: 028 282 72698 Fax: 028 282 77882 Email: larn@msca.co.uk Unit B, 2 Fleming Way, Limavady, BT49 0FB Tel: 028 777 22189 Fax: 028 777 22268 Email: lima@msca.co.uk www.moorestephens.co.uk/ni Registered to carry out audit work by Chartered Accountants Ireland. 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Signing up: Frances A Burscough reacts with, firstly shock, and then terror, after being asked to do the parachute jump Images: Kevin Cooper ‘May God have mercy on my soul’ Journalist Frances A Burscough tells VIEW about her fear of heights and flying as she bravely agrees to do a parachute jump in aid of the charity, the Meningitis Research Foundation T hey say there’s no such thing as a free lunch. In my case, that rule obviously extends to coffee too. I should have known that when Brian Pelan, (the editor, no less), invited me for a coffee there was going to be some sort of catch. And there was. An absolute hum-dinger in fact. But I’ll come to that in a minute. “I was wondering if you would be interesting in writing a new column for View magazine,” he began. Well, of course I would. A freelance journalist such as myself would normally have to grovel, beg, bribe or blackmail to get a new column, especially in the current climate of austerity and recession. To be actually invited to become a monthly contributor to the publication...well, it really was a no brainer. “Yes,” I replied, before I’d even taken my first sip of coffee . Then he told me what he wanted me to do. The small print as it were. My mission, should I choose to accept it – was to go on a series of challenges or events suggested by community groups and charities, in order to help publicise and raise awareness for their cause. So far so good, I thought, imagining a stall selling home-baked cupcakes at an elegant summer garden party in the glorious grounds of a sprawling stately home. “First up is a challenge by Keli Wilkinson, who is a fund-raising officer for the Meningitis Research Foundation,” said Brian. Excellent, I thought; a very worthy cause indeed, certainly worth supporting and publicising. Having brought up two children myself, the dread of meningitis had reared its ugly head many times when they were growing up. Every time they had a fever, a headache or were simply out of sorts I had always feared the worst; knowing that this disease could strike without any warning and had such common symptoms it could be easily be misdiagnosed as a cold. This was every mother’s nightmare and yet so little was known about its cause or its cure. “Great. Count me in,” I said, before I'd even taken my second sip of coffee. “All you have to do is to go on a sponsored parachute sky-dive,” said the editor. I spat my coffee out. Right across the table. Cappuccino froth sprayed over his paperwork as I tried to regain my composure... “Errr....(gulp)...from what height? (gulp),” I asked, feebly, as if that actually made any difference. Now I’m no expert, but it's probably safe to assume that if it involves a parachute, it’s going to be from somewhere quite high up. In the sky amongst the clouds. In the high heavens as it were. A place, I must add, that holds a great deal of fear for someone like me who is afraid of heights. “Roughly 13,000 feet,” was his reply. I tried to imagine 13,000 feet. I couldn’t. Not only that, but in order to get there a small aircraft of some sort would probably be involved. A thing that holds a great deal of fear for someone like me who, I have to add, is also afraid of flying. Did I say “afraid”? What I meant to say was “terrified”. “All you have to do is sign here on the dotted line, under the disclaimer and we can set the wheels in motion,” said Brian. I decided not to read the disclaimer. But I imagined the words “in the unlikely event of catastrophic equipment failure”. “Horrible death” and “flattened like a pancake” were probably in there somewhere in very small print. Nevertheless, I brushed away the cappuccino froth and signed my name. And may God have mercy on my soul. To be continued ..... To help get Frances up into the air for her parachute jump in aid of the Meningitis Research Foundation, we need to hit a target of £350. Simply click on http://www.justgiving.com/VIEWdigital and give an amount directly to the charity This project is part-financed by the European Union’s European Regional Development Fund through the Interreg IVA Cross Border Programme managed by the Special EU Programmes Body. VIEW, Issue four, 2012 The Big Picture EVERY month our email account at (editorial@viewdigital.org) is full of images sent by community and charity organisations who want us to help promote an event for them. Starting this issue, we will select an image sent in that captures our imagination. We are looking for striking photographs. So think big if you want to be the Big Picture in our next issue. Dance the night away Lauren Dickson left, with Catherine McCormick, Lady Portia, James Huish and Rosin Hamil at Belfast City Hall to help promote a Gala Night in aid of Shelter NI at the Stormont Hotel, Belfast, on Saturday, June 16. Tickets are £30. Tables of 12 are available. To book a table or individual seats, buy online at www.shelterni.org or email events@shelterni.org or ring 02890 245572 Website: viewdigital.org Page 14 VIEW, Issue five, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Page 15 VIEW, Issue four, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org I rode the Maracycle once and lived to tell the tale – again and again By Brian Pelan T he Maracycle – from Belfast to Dublin and back – is set to take place on Saturday, June 23, from Queen’s Sport, Upper Malone, Belfast. Hundreds of cyclists from all over Ireland have all ready signed up to the event, organised by the peacebuilding charity Co-operation Ireland. I will be with them in spirit but not in body. I am hoping to do it next year – I just have to put some miles back into my legs, cut down on the junk food and lay off the cigarettes. I done it once before in1985. It’s a day I will never forget. To say that I was nervous would be an under-statement. I had trained for the event, but as they say, there’s nothing like doing the real thing. My memory is off a glorious day as the cyclists set off from Belfast. The well-toned, super-fit riders were at the front on their light-weight machines that glided effortlessly to Dublin and back. Leading up the rear was all sorts of everything, including yours truly. One saving grace was that matter how unfit you were, there was always someone in worse shape. It meant that although riders would pass you on the road – I was also able to pass those in worse shape, huffing and puffing, as they put there bodies though mental and physical torture. As we approached the border, I recall a fellow cyclist confiding to me that he had never been in the Republic, and asked ‘did I think, he would be OK’?. I told him to relax and just to think of the glorious pints of Guinness that awaited him in Dublin. I arrived in Dublin in about six hours, had a couple of pints, then lay awake most of the night at the hostel I was staying in with thoughts of terror at the repeat ride back to Belfast that awaited me in the morning. I need not have worried. My legs had got the hang of it and I was back in Belfast in about five hours. Good luck to all those who are taking part in this year’s event, especially my younger brother Paul. And to the first-timers, enjoy the experience and remember, you get to brag about it for the rest of your life. I have – as my long-suffering family and friends can testify. • The closing date has been extended so there is still time to get your entry in. • Cyclists depart on Saturday, June 23, from Queen's Sport, Upper Malone, Belfast in staggered starts from 7.30am to 8am. The new start at Upper Malone is an ideal location and takes around 2.5 miles off the route each day. Distance to Dublin is now 108 miles to finish at Dublin City University. • To enter, you can print out the entry forms and details or enter online at www.cooperationireland.org/supportus/2012/ maracycle • If you have any problems with entering the event or need more details please email: events@cooperationireland.org or give us a call on +44 (0) 28 9032 1462. On your bike: A bunch of riders at the start of last year’s Maracycle Page 16 VIEW, Issue five, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Page 17 VIEW, Issue four, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Page 18 MLA praises report on social financing S To get a copy of the report, go to http://bit.ly/LO1EL5 ocial enterprises and third sector firms could have a significant role in the growth and rebalancing of the Northern Ireland economy, according to a new report. The Social Finance in Northern Ireland document (launched at Malone House, Belfast, by the incoming minister for finance and personnel, Simon Hamilton MLA) was commissioned by social finance organisations; the Ulster Community In- Simon Hamilton, vestment Trust and Charity Bank, and DUP MLA supported by the Building Change Trust. The paper said the legacy of grant funding may have stifled the development of social entrepreneurs and has recommended that such firms need to be able to win contracts, deliver services or develop their own income streams from leveraging assets. The report calls for government, the private and third sectors to work together to deliver a sustainable sector with strong financial and social balance sheets. Mr HamiIton said: “I am very pleased to be associated with this report. I want to thank the good work though that the Charity Bank has been doing, alongside the Ulster Community Investment Fund and the Building Change Trust. “The report has a lot of key messages for all of us in the social economy sector and in Government. “The first key message coming from the report is the importance of the third sector. The question comes back to us in Government as to how can we provide support to the sector? There are push and pull factors. Cutbacks in funding from what ever source are pushing in the direction of social financing and you are being pulled in that you become to dependent on grant aid and assistance. Those two factors are pushing us inevitably towards social financing. This is something that we in Government recognise.” Practical advice and a sensitive personal approach. We pride ourselves on our unrivalled commitment to clients’ needs. Edwards & Co. solicitors advises charities and the voluntary sector in Northern Ireland on a wide range of legal issues including charity creation, charitable status and constitutional matters, trading and commercial arrangements, employment law, finance, fundraising and property law, as well as dealing with the Charity Commission ‘Measuring Change’ document launched C To get a copy of the report, contact CENI at info@ceni.org ommunity Evaluation Northern Ireland (CENI) recently hosted a conference at Belfast Castle on ‘Collaborating on Outcomes: Funders and the Sector Working Together’. Financial austerity has placed even more pressure on Government to demonstrate the impact of its investments on communities. Recent reports from the Public Accounts Committee stressed the Brendan McDonnell, need for government and the voluntary sector to work collaboratively to develop Director, CENI appropriate outcome measures. The conference brought together speakers from government and other funding bodies, evaluation practitioners and the sector to explore some of the issues and challenges involved as well as possible solutions to putting such collaboration into practice. CENI presented the ‘Measuring Change’ approach; a practical, robust and cost-effective way of capturing difficult to measure qualitative outcomes. This has been successfully piloted across a range of funding programmes. Representatives from the Big Lottery Fund, Neighbourhood Renewal Programme and Belfast City Council presented their experiences of ‘Measuring Change’ and highlighted the potential application of this approach. Speaking at the event, CENI Director, Brendan McDonnell said:“While everyone talks about outcomes, actually capturing and measuring the difference made by community based organisations remains very difficult. “Today was an opportunity to discuss these challenges but also to reflect on one approach developed by CENI – ‘Measuring Change’. “While still a work in progress, this approach demonstrates that it is possible to measure community outcomes, but it needs a structured process involving both Government and funded organisations working together to decide what it is they want to change and how far they have progressed.” for Northern Ireland. Our team offers a full range of legal services including mediation, criminal law, clinical negligence and personal injury claims, as well as family/matrimonial work. Contact Jenny and Teresa: Edwards & Co. Solicitors, 28 Hill Street, Belfast, BT1 2LA. Tel: (028) 9032 1863 Email: info@edwardsandcompany.co.uk Web: edwardsandcompany.co.uk VIEW, Issue four, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Speakers Deborah Green, Steve McDermott and John News Remember to check into Ramada for Active in the Community event D o you know what Timebanking is? The Vision seminars at the Active in the Community two-day event at Belfast this autumn will provide the answer. Motivational speaker, Steve McDermott, will also be on hand to inspire with his key note address: ‘When The Going Gets Tough’. The seminars will suggest how local communities can mobilise people and resources to tackle areas of economic and social concern. Speakers at the event include Volunteer Now’s Billy Eagleson, who will explain the Timebanking concept and how it can empower organisations and communities. Debra Green, director of Manchester-based ROC, will highlight the opportunities and benefits which arise when statutory agencies and community groups work together in partnership. Jonathan McAlpin, Director of Operations for the Ulster Community Investment Trust, will offer his views on the role played by social enterprise in helping communities in Northern Ireland to become more productive. John News (Participation Manager, Sport Northern Ireland) will discuss the various outcomes of engaging communities in sport and physical activity programmes. John, who will present the SNI Active Communities programme, will give practical advice on how you and your community can get involved and enjoy the benefits of being more physically active. Delegates to the Active in the Community event, at the Ramada hotel, October 9 –10, will also get special deals from exhibitors – including local charities and social enterprises – offering products and services. Keep up to date with developments about the Active in the Community event on Facebook http://www.facebook.com/aic.ni. Event organiser Paul Scott can be contacted at info@contactireland.com or by phone, on 0799 078 0453 SUPPORTINGOUR MEMBERS DEFENDINGJOBS ANDSERVICES TOJOINUNISONTEL.08453550845 ORJOINONLINE https://join.unison.org.uk/joinus.php Page 20 Osborne’s ‘U-turn’ welcomed THE Northern Ireland Council for Voluntary Action (NICVA) and the Community Foundation have both welcomed the decision by the Chancellor George Osborne to drop plans to introduce a cap on tax relief on charitable giving. NICVA was only one of hundreds of charities across the UK that backed the ‘Give it back George’ campaign, citing the damage it would do by painting “philanthropists as tax dodgers and the charities themselves as bogus”. Seamus McAleavey, chief executive of NICVA said: “We strongly welcome the U turn in this decision. The damage a cap on tax relief on all charities at this current time would have been great, for large voluntary or community organisations, but also for smaller groups who benefit from grantmaking trusts and foundations, supported from large gift aided donations.” Announcing the rethink, Mr Osborne said: "I can confirm that we will proceed next year with a cap on income tax reliefs for wealthy people, but we won't be capping relief for giving money to charity. “It is clear from our conversations with charities that any kind cap could damage donations, and as I said at the Budget that's not what we want at all.” Helen McKeever, Fund Development Manager at the Community Foundation for Northern Ireland, said; “Our Foundation welcomes the Treasury’s decision to reverse the plan to limit tax relief on charitable donations. “This follows a high profile campaign from the community and voluntary sector, which the Community Foundation for Northern Ireland fully supported.” Community & Voluntary Branch VIEW, Issue five, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Page 21 Support team: Chairperson June Donaldson with treasurer Elaine Bull, secretary Christina McCarten and some of the newly trained Doula volunteers Every mum should have a Doula F ATHERS need to realise that Doulas are there for mum, dad and the family as a whole”, said Elaine Bull from Doula Vision – a set of volunteers who help new mothers. Men according to Elaine, who lives in Markethill Co. Armagh, are still “hesitant” about the service. “We offer a mixture of emotional and practical support”, said Elaine. “Some new mothers want help with feeding while others want the bathroom cleaned or help with older toddlers – it depends on the family”. Elaine is happy to prepare meals for the family she is helping. While she says she is not a cordon bleu cook she is well used to cooking for her own siblings. Following a difficult time after the birth of Deputy mayor Kevin Campbell (second right) at a recent Men’s Action Network (MAN) event as part of the Derry City Council’s Community Relations Week which ran from May 14-20. Also with participants of the workshop is Carol Stewart, Community Relations Officer at Derry City Council. The event launched a publication developed through a series of MAN workshops which explored the legacy and the impact of ‘the Troubles’ on the lives of men, their relationships and their health Image: Maurice Thompson By Una Murphy one of her own children, Elaine realised the importance of extra support for new mothers. She went to England to train as a Doula with Nurturing Birth – who now come to Kilkeel to help train the growing band of Doulas here. Elaine and her colleague June go out with volunteer Doulas to women expecting a baby and an agreement is drawn up about the type of work to be undertaken. Elaine says a Doula will meet up with the woman she is helping about five times before the birth, be there during labour and call to her home about three times a week after the baby is born. She would like the Health Service to refer pregnant woman to Doula Vision. The group will now go to any address in Northern Ireland although they need more volunteers in the northwest. “We give the mother confidence and help them in the areas that stress them out” says Elaine. • To search for volunteering opportunities in your local area, please visit www.volunteernow.co.uk or Call 0845 652 6065 • If you have a volunteer story which you would like to share with VIEW please contact Una Murphy email: editorial@viewdigital.org VIEW, Issue four, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Page 22 ‘Dating’ tips on finding a new partner By Jenny Ebbage W PHoToLinE Photographer Kevin cooper has more than 25 years experience in Press and Pr photography. Kevin works to a wide range of clients in community and voluntary sector organisations as well as the trade union movement. For quoTaTions conTacT Kevin cooper Q A Q Can you give our readers a brief outline about UCIT We evolved out of the third sector during the 1990s. A number of key activists, who came together through a series of conferences, identified a range of things that were needed for the sector to help it to grow and strengthen. Q amount of grant dependancy and has been used to a reasonably good supply of grants, coming from European peace money, the International Fund for Ireland and other sources of financing. You give out loans and not grants, how do you compare to the main banks in Northern Ireland. tions.We’re a bit like credit unions for that sector. Our loan lending rates would go out at anywhere between five and eight percent Jenny Ebbage offers helpful advice on new collaborative ways of working together ment will be; indeed how long it is intended to last. Agreements can be as simple as a memorandum of understanding (between two organisations XX) right up to the formality of a full-blown merger (two organisations becoming one) but the legal structures have different implications in terms of how the joint working will be run. Remember – in a legal context being ‘partners’ means something very different than two organisations happening to get on well with one another! One thing, however, that is of paramount importance in the collaboration process is that both sides carry out a thorough risk-assessment. Charities have to be prepared to ask a great deal of difficult ‘what if’ questions — working on scenarios ranging from one party encountering financial difficulties to who is liable in the event of a legal challenge. This can be difficult because no-one wants to countenance the idea of failure before you even start out. Nevertheless, it’s an essential aspect of the duty of care that those who run charities have to their organisation. With all that said, charities shouldn’t be put off from considering collaborative working. There are a great many benefits to be gained from such co-operation – greater clout for political engagement or new ways to spread a cost-base. It can be an excellent way for charities to survive and thrive in a difficult environment. I’ve personally overseen some of the largest charity mergers in Northern Ireland and providing both sides ‘look before they leap’, many charities shouldn’t hesitate in saying ‘I do!’ MEDIA ASSOCIATES • Print, design, editing If you like the look of VIEW and want to get help with your own PR/campaign material, get in touch with Brian Pelan, email: brianpelan@gmail.com • Special discounts for the community/voluntary sector for a loan all about being able to access the finance. A It’s Banks may not be willing to support you because they see you as to high a credit risk. It would be fair to say that UCIT would take a more flexible approach. We wouldn’t levy an arrangement or early redemption fee. Can you tell me a bit about the recent report, ‘Social Financing in Northern Ireland: Innovative Thinking and Action’, that you recently launched with the Charity Bank. report looks critically at how our secA The tor has evolved and grown with a certain market place is social enterprises, chariA Our ties and community and voluntary organisa- E: photoline@supanet.com T: 028 90777299 M: 07712044751 Page 23 ‘We take flexible approach to loans’ is the advantage for a Q What community group in going to UCIT objects of both parties —that are enshrined in the constitution of each charity. If trustees breach this, they could find themselves personally liable for any losses that the charity incurs. One of the less well-known principles of any kind of contracting is that it has to be in both parties’ interests- there has to be ‘mutual value’: it needs to be clear what both parties are gaining from the exchange and that needs to be totally clear in any agreement. Something charities also need to work through is how formal or informal the commit- Website: viewdigital.org VIEW editor Brian Pelan asks Jonathan McAplin, Director of Operations at the Ulster Community Investment Trust (UCIT), about what role his organisation plays in the third sector ith budgets stretched and charities under pressure to care for even more service users, more and more groups in the charity sector are exploring collaborative ways of working: finding ways of pooling their resources to achieve shared aims. However, before charities seek to ‘tie the knot’ in a working “partnership”, there are a couple of key points that they need to bear in mind. I’ve found that when charities look at getting together, there’s a lot in common with the dating game: it works best when both parties have the same expectations about what they’re getting in to, when they’ve done suitable ‘due diligence’ on their potential new ‘partner’ and where it’s clear to both parties how the success of such a venture will be measured. It’s important that there is a cool and analytical assessment of the reason for two organisations to work together in the first place. The relationship has to be in line with the charitable purposes or ‘Providing both sides ‘look before they leap’, many charities shouldn’t hesitate in saying ‘I do!’ VIEW, Issue five, 2012 how do you make repayQ Finally, ments if you are a community Jonathan McAlpin, UCIT group that doesn’t make money. is the nature of UCIT’s relaQ What tionship with the Charity Bank. of us are interested in the charity and A Both social economy sector, what we can do to grow it and the financing needs of it. We approached the Building Change Trust who provided some funding for us to commision joint research into this area. A That’s where I think our sector has a long way to go because I think you can make money. One of the problems we have is the definition of what our sector is. We have community-based organisations who do need grant funding to deliver certain services. But there are other parts of the sector than can operate more like businesses. such as the Bryson Group model. IN THE NEWS Boost for co-operative movement AS the first wind energy co-operative is set up in Northern Ireland, a major conference is taking place in Belfast this month to look at the potential of coops to regenerate local communities. The launch of a share offer for Drumlin Wind Energy Co-operative and the conference on June 28 coincides with the United Nations International Year of Co-operatives. Drumlin Wind Energy is to issue a public share offer to raise up to £4 million, to build and operate up to five 250kW wind turbines, at five locations across Northern Ireland in Larne, Ballyclare, Kells and Pomeroy. The ‘Co-operatives: a model for sustainable development’ conference in Belfast is expected to attract political, business, statutory agency, trade union representatives and community activists. • Details on Co-operative Conference: http://bit.ly/JHC2n4 • Drumlin Wind Energy Cooperative site: www.drumlin.coop Keep eye out for news from NICVA LOOK out for eNews and nicvanews from NICVA which provide relevant and timely information to the voluntary and community sector in Northern Ireland. eNews guarantees something of interest every week. Subscribe on the NICVA website: www.nicva.org/publications/enews nicvanews provides in depth coverage on issues relevant to NICVA’s member organisations with regular features on news, events, funding opportunities and deadlines, as well as offering space to focus on the work of projects taking place throughout the sector. Find out more about nicvanews at www.nicva.org/content/nicvanews. To submit an article, email: editors@nicva.org tel: 028 9087 7777 A wide range of information and resources online are also available from NICVA at www.nicva.org, www.communityni.org and on Facebook at facebook.nicva.org and Twitter @NICVA Talks to focus on charity regulations FREE ‘Good Governance’ seminars focusing on charity regulations under the Charity Act (NI) are being held this month in Derry, Downpatrick, Ballymena, Armagh and Belfast. Contact North West Community Network, East Down Rural Community Network, North Antrim Community Network and Volunteer Now for details. VIEW, Issue five, 2012 Website: viewdigital.org Page 24 Launch: Gillian Stewart (left) and Holly Sweeney helping to promote mini-Olympics event Help children with cancer by joining mini-Olympics W gold. ITH summer 2012 nearly upon us, Olympic fever is reaching boiling point and a local charity is hoping to turn our obsession with sport into The Northern Ireland Cancer Fund for Children (NICFC) is recruiting five-strong corporate teams of wannabe Olympians to go head-to-head in their very own Mini Olympics on June 22. Last June, the NICFC’s Old Skool Sports Day, which raised more than £6,000, allowed participants to relive their youth, competing in old favourites such as the egg and spoon and the sack race. With a healthy number of teams already signed up to this year’s event, the fundraising team are confident their target of £10,000 will be met. Teams will battle for first place in Olympicstyle events such as hurdles, 500m relay, shot put and cross country. There will also be competitions such as tugof-war and an obstacle course. The organisers hope there will be plenty of people buzzing from their achievements in May’s Belfast Marathon, who will be keen to keep their fitness levels up and support the NICFC by signing up for this day of fun and fundraising. NICFC corporate fundraising manager Joanne McCallister told VIEW that many of the businesses who took part in last year’s day of sport have already signed up to the 2012 Mini Olympics. Ms McCallister has urged workmates to get their teams together quickly. “This one-off event will suit people of all ages and abilities. “Whether you are looking for a sporting challenge or just a bit of fun, this event has something to offer everyone. “We are calling on as many businesses as possible to sign up and help NI Cancer Fund for Children raise vital funds for children and young With the Olympics nearly upon us, Belfast is staging its own mini-games in aid of the Northern Ireland Cancer Fund for Children. Heather McGarrigle reports people living with cancer.” Teams of five are to meet at Belfast Rugby Club on June 22 for registration at 5pm, with the games beginning at 6pm. Each team should complete a registration form before the event and a registration fee of £15 per person is required, along with a minimum team sponsorship of £200. The registration fee includes a burger from the barbecue for each participant. There will also be bar facilities on the day. With three children, teenagers or young people receiving a cancer diagnosis every week in Northern Ireland, the NICFC’s services remain in high demand. The organisation works with cancer patients aged up to 24 years old, as well as their families, providing emotional, practical and financial support. They also support young people whose parents are living with cancer. Its residential facilities at Shimna Valley in Newcastle and Pine and Birch Cottages in Coleraine allow families respite and relaxation, free of charge. Patricia Kidd, complex manager at Shimna Valley, said fundraising from events like the Mini Olympics is crucial for the work of the NICFC. She said: “Generosity of the public is central to what we do. We couldn’t be Northern Ireland’s leading children’s charity without it.” Patricia told VIEW it costs an estimated £120,000 to £125,000 annually to run Shimna Valley, which sees between 250 and 300 families per year come through its doors. It is hoped they will be able to open a new building soon to provide more space and support. However, she believes the Mini Olympics will bring more than just vital cash. “It will be a lovely day for the families, who I am sure will be invited to come and watch the games. “It is great for the children to see what people are doing to raise money for the organisation, and also to enjoy a good day out.” Gillian Creevy, chief executive of NICFC, said: “NICFC's service provision is now an integral component of the model that is treatment and care for children and young people who have been diagnosed with cancer, and their families, in Northern Ireland. “However less than one percent of our annual operating budget comes from Government and delivery of our services is almost entirely dependant upon being successful with our fundraising effort. We are fortunate in having an extremely committed and dedicated fundraising team and events such as this one are an important part of our fundraising mix.’ • To register, phone 028 9080 5599 or email fundraising@nicfc.com More information can be found on on www.nicfc.com