Briefings

Let Scottish Parliament know 

October 6, 2020

In the last edition, I described my experience of giving evidence at the Scottish Parliament on the progress (or lack of it) in relation to community empowerment in general and in particular two sections of the Act - sections 3 and 5 that relate to participation and asset transfer requests.  A few voices at a Committee is one thing, but it is surely much better that the committee in question hear from those who have lived experience of trying to use the Community Empowerment Act. Running until 23rd October, the Local Government and Communities Committee is canvassing your views.

 

Author: Scottish Parliament

The Scottish Parliament’s Local Government and Communities Committee seeks the views of community organisations across Scotland on the effectiveness of participation requests and asset transfers as set out in the Community Empowerment Act 2015.

We are particularly keen to hear from groups that have submitted participation requests or engaged in the asset transfer process. This survey will give you the chance to describe your experiences in detail and highlight what went well and what didn’t go so well.

However, even if you haven’t submitted participation requests, or have never been involved in asset transfer, we would still like to hear from you about what more can be done to support and empower your community.

This survey should take no more than half an hour to complete. If you would like your response to be anonymous, you will have the opportunity to tell us so. However, if you are interested in speaking to the Committee about your community and the projects you are engaged in, please email Greig or Jason (see below) with your details and we will be in touch over the coming weeks.

If you have any questions about the survey, and how your response will be used, please contact either Greig Liddell (Scottish Parliament Information Centre) or Jason Nairn (Assistant Clerk to the Local Government and Communities Committee). More information on how the information from this questionnaire will be used, please see the Parliament’s Privacy Notice.

Briefings

Important first step

Despite Covid having knocked the wind from the sails of the short term letting industry and its principal cheerleader Airbnb, with many property owners reflecting that their 2nd house ‘investment strategy’ needs a rethink, the prevalence of unregulated short term letting properties continues to blight communities - Edinburgh and Skye being the worst affected. Driven largely by the work of the Homes First campaign, Scottish Government has launched a consultation as a first step towards reform. PLACE , a self organising network of Edinburgh residents, are to the fore of this campaign. Their submission is a useful starting point.

 

Author: PLACE Edinburgh

Feedback needed on this draft response to the Short Term Lets Consultation on a licensing scheme and planning control areas in Scotland by PLACE Edinburgh. See their draft response here

Briefings

Big Society 2.0

David Cameron’s ‘big idea’ during his tenure as PM was the Big Society but it wasn’t long before ‘other priorities’ led to it being quietly binned. More recently Boris Johnson asked one of his team to produce some ideas on how to sustain all that community spirit that he’d observed in response to Covid. Embracing the challenge with real gusto, Danny Kruger MP produced a long list of recommendations for a new era of community power. His boss’ letter of thanks for all his hard work suggests that his ideas are unlikely to see the light of day.

 

Author: Danny Kruger MP

In June the Prime Minister asked Danny Kruger MP for proposals to sustain the community spirit we saw during the lockdown.

Levelling up our communities: proposals for a new social covenant sets out a vision for a more local, more human, less bureaucratic, less centralised society in which people are supported and empowered to play an active role in their neighbourhoods.

The Prime Minister has responded to the report:

“We have seen tremendous levels of voluntary action by private citizens, and of innovation and partnership between the public, private and social sectors. These are critical elements of the social model we want to see for the recovery, and into the future.”

Kruger’s proposals include:

  • A ‘Community Power Act’ to give local people power over the design and delivery of public services
  • ‘Pop-up parishes’ with time-limited powers and freedoms to innovate
  • A Volunteer Passport system to match the supply and demand for voluntary help
  • A new National Volunteer Reserve to help with future emergencies and ongoing environmental challenges
  • Paid ‘service opportunities’ for unemployed young people to work on social and environmental projects, funded through the Kickstart programme
  • An annual Neighbour Day bank holiday to celebrate communities and volunteering
  • A deal with faith communities to work with the public sector on big social challenges
  • A deal with Big Tech to design new ‘digital infrastructure’ for communities
  • A new £500 million Community Recovery Fund to help civil society during the current crisis, financed through the defunct National Fund
  • A new £2 billion endowment, the Levelling Up Communities Fund, for investment in long-term, community-led transformation in left-behind areas, financed through dormant insurance accounts.

As Kruger reports in his letter to the Prime Minister,

“We are on the cusp of a new era of economic and social policy. The era just ending was governed by economic and social doctrines which have caused us to become the most regionally unequal country in the developed world, with a range of chronic social challenges. The era now opening must address these challenges by putting communities at the heart of policy making.

“The experience of the recent crisis – the willingness of local people to step forward and collaborate, the flexibility shown by public services and the social commitment of businesses – shows what is possible. Add the extraordinary new dynamics of data and digital innovation, and a wholly new paradigm is possible in which community power replaces the dominance of remote public and private sector bureaucracies.”

Kruger writes:

“The social covenant is the mutual commitment by citizens, civil society, businesses and the state, each to fulfil their discrete responsibilities and to work together for the common good of all. We need a new social and economic model to achieve this.”

Levelling Up Our Communities is available for download here: https://www.dannykruger.org.uk/communities-report

The Prime Minister’s response to the report is as follows:

Dear Danny

Thank you for your report, Levelling Up Our Communities, which you wrote in response to my request for proposals on how to sustain the community spirit of the lockdown. As you say, we have seen tremendous levels of voluntary action by private citizens, and of innovation and partnership between the public, private and social sectors. These are critical elements of the social model we want to see for the recovery, and into the future.

I am pleased to announce that on ‘public value commissioning’, we are today launching a new framework for public procurement by central government. Drawing on the best models of local procurement, this framework will level the playing field for small business and social enterprises so they can win more contracts from government.

I have asked Diana Barran, Minister for Civil Society, to consult with the people, charities and other local organisations who have volunteered during the pandemic, to discuss whether and how they expect to volunteer in future, and what infrastructure or policy support will help them to do so. Your comprehensive and hugely ambitious report contains many exciting ideas, which are actively being considered by DCMS, and I have asked Secretary of State Oliver Dowden, who is responsible for the Government’s civil society agenda, to update you on the Government’s work in this area in due course.

Once again, my thanks for your report, and thanks also to the many people who contributed ideas and information to it. I look forward to continuing the conversation.

Boris Johnson

Briefings

Deja vu planning

As always seems to be the way with legislation, the devil is in the detail and now that the high level arguments that surrounded the Planning Act are out the way  (the most amended piece of legislation in the history of the Scottish Parliament) the real arguments can begin about the detail and where that devil is hiding. Local Place Plans have been heralded as the way to give communities much more traction in the planning process. We argued that to all intents and purposes, this was an old idea with a new name. Yet to be persuaded otherwise.

 

Author: Community Enterprise

Community Action Plans :An Approach to Place Based Strategic Planning

Background to Community Action Planning

Community led action planning is a tried and tested way of setting out a vision for a community with an accompanying set of actions to be delivered over time.

It is a participatory tool aimed at not only developing that plan, but, in the process, building the capacity of the residents of a community so that there is the skills, confidence, resources and resilience to implement that plan with minimal external support.

It is not meant to articulate what a community is like, but to stimulate change and action.   The action plan will be set out in response to the needs, challenges and gaps in a community and the implementation plan will be rooted in the assets of a community.

Under an aspirational statement about what people want the community to be like in an achievable future, there is detail about what will be done, who will do it, how it will be resourced and how it will be undertaken.

It is often led by one group, (often an over-arching community anchor organisation, development trust or community council) but delivery is the responsibility of the whole community and not that one organisation.  As a result, a good plan will see existing organisations stepping up to the plate, and new organisations forming.

There has been a range of iterations of the process including community led action planning, consultant led community research, development frameworks and master planning, landscape appraisals, townscape appraisals and co-design charrettes

The most recent re-articulation of community plans are Local Place Plans.  In 2017 The Scottish Government introduced the Planning (Scotland) Bill. The Bill introduces a new right for communities to produce Local Place Plans.

The objective of a Local Place Plan is to “significantly enhance engagement in development planning, effectively empowering  communities to play a proactive role in defining the future of their place”.

Spatial or ‘development planning’ includes things like housing, public facilities, business growth, use of land or buildings, roads, flooding, energy, recreation, paths and other infrastructure which impact on people.  A good plan should ideally merge these approaches, containing both community consultation and project development, but also a vision for the physical place using design techniques.

Whatever the current strategic drivers, it is vital to develop effective, efficient ways to enable local people to drive change in their own communities.

The Making Places initiative was a (now closed) Scottish Government fund to resource communities to undertake Local Place Plans.  Though they are community controlled there is an acknowledgement that communities often need sensitive support and facilitation to undertake this work.

A blend of local knowledge gained through lived experience, combined with objective specialist technical support, can build both consensus and clear evidence to achieve robust community action plans that will make a difference over time.

Briefings

The end of ownership

Occasionally a new model pops up that looks like it might challenge the primacy of ownership in our society - the sharing economy showed early promise but with the rise of the world’s largest hotel chain that didn’t own a hotel (airbnb), the largest retailer but without any shops or goods (Amazon) or largest world’s transport company without vehicles (Uber), initial enthusiasm soon faltered. Nonetheless, as Kelly Bewers at Pioneers Post argues, if the new systems we need are to be genuinely more participatory, inclusive and democratised, our understanding of ownership probably needs to evolve from where it is just now.  

 

Author: Karen Bewers, Pioneers Post

As we try to move towards a more inclusive and democratic system, what role does ownership play in the new economy? Is it even a useful principle nowadays – and does something have to be owned to have value? Our columnist picks the brains of two women who are challenging conventional thinking, and finds potential answers in employee-owned firms, earth stewardship, storytelling and activism.

Ownership has uncomfortable connotations. Less than 200 years ago only men who owned land could vote in Britain. In the early 20th century, men still legally ‘owned’ their wives and it was the 1960s before full equal rights within marriage were enshrined in law. Colonialism created slave ‘owners’ and a legacy system of racial oppression that continues to this day.

Yet ownership is still central to our social, economic and cultural life. Owning a property is an aspiration for many; “owning up to something” a sign of leadership and responsibility; “being your own man” implies confidence and independent thought. At the same time, our young people are growing up in a world where the largest retailer doesn’t own any items (Amazon), the biggest transport service doesn’t own any vehicles (Uber), and the most popular hotel chain doesn’t own any hotels (AirBnB).

In this context, as we hope to transition to a more generative, inclusive and democratic system, what role does ownership play in the new economy? Is it still a useful principle? Does something have to be owned to have value? Earlier this month I attended Stir to Action’s (virtual) festival, “A Playground for the New Economy”, to explore these questions and spoke to two influential thinkers and doers in alternative models of ownership.

It’s about access, not ownership

Josina Calliste“We don’t want to own land in order to be more wealthy,” Josina Calliste tells me. “It’s about looking at a different model of wealth: having nutritious food; not living in overcrowded spaces; enjoying a relationship with land that our ancestors had; improved mental health.” Josina (pictured) is the co-founder of Land In Our Names (or LION), a Black-led, grassroots collective committed to reparative justice in Britain by securing land for BPOC (Black people and people of colour) communities. She uses the term ownership because “it reflects the language of the current land system,” but for Josina, LION’s mission is more about “land use and land access.”

Little research exists on the racial demographics of land ownership in the UK, but according to Who Owns England?, 1% of the population own more than 50% of the land in England alone, with 30% of land in the hands of the aristocracy and gentry. BAME (Black, Asian and minority ethnic) communities are 60% less likely to be able to access green space and natural environments than their white counterparts.

“Ownership kills ecologies,” Josina tells me, quoting social justice activist Aurora Levins Morales. For instance, a farmer using pesticides will pollute not just the river on their land, but the ecosystem for miles around. Josina advocates instead for a holistic approach to land use that benefits more people, specifically “the most marginalised, deprived and underheard.”

1% of the population own more than 50% of the land in England. BAME communities are 60% less likely to be able to access green space

Deb Oxley is CEO of the Employee Ownership Association. With over 25 years’ experience in the public and private sectors, she came to the role eight years ago with a desire to “get under the skin of new business structures”. Before employee ownership was an option, the typical route for a business leader considering succession planning or exit was a trade sale or a management buyout – both scenarios, says Deb, where the value of the business is transferred from one small group of people to another. Employee ownership democratises that transfer – ownership of the business and its value is shared with a much wider group. This “helps to root business in the locality and its community, instead of being sold to a competitor, which usually hits jobs,” Deb affirms.

Employee owned businesses give workers “a stake and a say” – access to a share of financial reward and participation in business decisions. Employees also report high levels of engagement, satisfaction and positive mental health. Although some privately-owned businesses have profit share arrangements, they rarely include everyone, Deb argues, so they lack the equality of access that’s “structurally engineered” into employee owned businesses.

Equality access is “structurally engineered” into employee owned businesses

Stewardship: a viable alternative?

Josina describes the members of LION as “earth stewards” and she is inspired by the story of Sinead Fenton, recently featured in The Observer in an article about the rise of female farmers. Sinead is mixed race and her edible flower farm, part of the Ecological Land Co-op, is in an area that needs land regeneration. She advocates for a new style of farming, because “things have been done the same way by the same people for a long time.” Josina explains that the term ‘new entrants’ into farming doesn’t recognise the deep connection many LION members feel to the land through their ancestry: “We carry knowledge, often embodied knowledge, about the land. Stories that have been passed down. So many people came from farming backgrounds before they arrived in Britain.” For her it’s about increasing pathways into farming and land access and she’s proud of LION’s record in getting these conversations going.

Josina’s team of organisers are all feminists, mostly queer and advocating for trans-rights and trans-liberation, with Black women’s needs at the core. Previously, Josina worked in sexual health and she draws links between reproductive justice, land justice, food justice and racial justice. Black people and people of colour are at greater risk of experiencing food inequality and food insecurity, which was exacerbated during the Covid-19 lockdown. “You need to take a systems approach – women are very prominent and present in those spaces. We want to build a movement of Black people, Black women and non-binary people who are advocating for safe land use.”

To do this, she wants to change the image that many of us in the UK have when we imagine a farmer – usually a white, older man. “In the Global South most subsistence farmers are women. Women are feeding the world!” Josina exclaims. “We can draw back deep into our history to a long legacy of being earth stewards.”

In the Global South most subsistence farmers are women. Women are feeding the world! – Josina Calliste

Speaking at the Stir to Action festival, Deb said that creating a “culture of ownership” unleashes a certain power and behaviour, because “when someone owns something they act differently, protecting it for the long-term.”

However, ownership doesn’t always equate to protection and I would argue you can still care about something if you don’t own it. I suggest a model that champions collective stewardship might be a more valuable message for the new economy and Deb considers this in the context of gender: “Many of the business founders we engage with and support through the Employee Ownership Association are men. They come from a generation of business owners – the baby boomers. We’re helping a lot of them do the right thing for the future of their own business.”

What’s interesting, Deb tells me, is that as a result of these transitions, many of those businesses end up being led by women. These male founders – rather than go for management buy-outs, mergers or acquisitions – have chosen to “empower women” through this transition. Of course, this isn’t the only way that women can become CEOs, but in a system where thousands of SMEs and family-owned businesses will change hands in the next few years, it’s interesting to consider how women might steer this power shift and become stewards of more democratically owned organisations.

New stories of ownership

Currently alternative business models are in the minority, with just 470 employee owned businesses in the UK. Deb wants to see many more – yet she is also pragmatic: it’s about “plurality” and “more diversity in business structures” rather than discrediting other models.

Different stories are needed to demonstrate the power of employee ownership, Deb believes. “In the mainstream business press there is too much dominance by PLCs, yet the majority of UK workers don’t work in those businesses.” In fact, 99% of UK private businesses are SMEs and family-owned enterprises. As a result, there’s a raft of society’s interests that are not catered for, because attention is focussed on listed companies and public markets. Employee ownership offers a version of stakeholder capitalism that can enable businesses to remain relevant in the future.

Josina reflects that challenging Britain’s land system is tough and at times she doesn’t see encouraging signs that her advocacy and activism will change things soon. She refers to the backlash from National Trust members threatening to cancel their memberships after the conservation organisation acknowledged its links to slavery. Similarly, when the BBC’s Countryfile did a segment that explored why people of colour often feel unwelcome in the countryside, there was outrage on Twitter – with one user accusing the broadcaster of being a “Marxist organisation, shoving Black Lives Matter down Countryfile viewers’ throats.”

Pragmatic or radical change?

I ask Deb about some of the more ‘radical’ language and positions that the New Economy Movement is known for taking, and how she positions herself and employee ownership within that paradigm.

“Whenever someone sets themselves against something you create division. In most parts of life there’s space for lots of different views and opinions. A radical approach – pitching yourself against different parts of the economy – doesn’t work.” For Deb it’s about pluralism, but that doesn’t mean not calling out bad behaviour and unfairness when it happens. Executive pay is an example: “We’re in a ridiculous situation where performance of corporate business is not in line with what leaders are paid. That’s wrong and should be called out.”

Deb’s view is persuasive and I can see how her role leading the Employee Ownership Association has influenced business leaders across the UK. It’s about small, incremental gains, not tearing up the system with revolution. It’s working: over 50% of employee ownership transitions have happened since 2017.

We need radicals inside and outside our systems and institutions to work towards creating a better future

Josina is more outspoken, arguing that we need both pragmatic incrementalism and radical activism in the new economy movement, to fight for justice across the many complex and connected systems of oppression – whether that be race and land, or gender and business. “My ancestors lived under systems of enslavement and colonialism. The reality for them then was that enslavement would never end. You had to have people existing in that system, as well as the people who were ready to raze everything to the ground, in order to overthrow it.” She doesn’t recognise the tension between pragmatism and radicalism posed in my question. “It’s easy to write off completely abolishing private property as something that will never be achieved, but I also admire people who can be incrementalists and make things slightly better tomorrow.”

This duality of activist approaches is unifying and a lesson for social justice leaders – rather than arguing about which method of changemaking is most effective, can we celebrate and champion them all? We need radicals inside and outside our systems and institutions to influence and work towards creating a better future.

Can new models of ownership lead to more distributed power?

Through employee ownership, Deb champions an alternative business model that can more fairly distribute organisational capital and power, while existing within and alongside our current economic system. Ownership is a tool that can enable greater justice in a system of enterprise. Josina questions the very concept of ownership as a hypothesis for organising in the first place, and challenges the orthodoxy that land is a commodity that can be owned, traded and exploited by a privileged, predominantly white elite. Land, unlike business, is not man-made but nature-given.

The reality is that we live in an unequal society. Transitioning to a new economy requires us to build the scaffolding on stable foundations. Can new models of ownership lead to more distributed power? I’m convinced that the right kind of ownership – shared, collective, inclusive, steward-based – can be positive for business, land and the economy, as long as we seek to change and re-balance who owns and how they own.

Briefings

Sign up

The loss of biodiversity around the world is every bit the existential threat to humankind that the closely related challenge of climate breakdown is. Last month, a global campaign was launched calling on a massive programme of investment ($500 billion) in community led action to avert further biodiversity loss. Timed to coincide with the UN summit on biodiversity, an open letter was sent to the UN Director General signed by 150 conservation groups from around the planet (22 from Scotland).  David Attenborough has fronted a short video to launch the campaign.   

 

Author: Fauna and Flora International

A petition awaits your signature HERE

To read letter to the United Nation Secretary General and to see Scotland’s signatories. CLICK HERE

Briefings

Measuring community strength

September 22, 2020

It seems a bit of an omission, given how much is being expected of communities at the moment, but there is no real consensus around how to measure the strength of a community. No doubt views are formed anecdotally and shared informally but the lack of transparency and a common understanding of how such views are arrived at helps no one. A useful contribution - although not without flaws - comes from think tank Onward which identifies 5 key threads that combine to form our social fabric and can be used to measure changes in community strength over time.   

 

Author: Will Tanner, James O’Shaughnessy, Fjolla Krasniqi and James Blagden by Onward

This morning Onward publishes a new research paper, State of our Social Fabric, by Will Tanner, James O’Shaughnessy, Fjolla Krasniqi and James Blagden. This landmark report is a part of Onward’s Repairing our Social Fabric research programme launched in March 2020.

The report estimates the strength of community over time and in every local authority in the UK, focusing on five key threads: the strength of social relationships, the quality of civic institutions, the acceptance of positive social norms, the value of its local economy and the levels of physical infrastructure. Alongside the report, the authors have published the Social Fabric Index using these five key threads. Head to our interactive map of the Social Fabric Index to see how your own constituency does.
Read the research here | Interactive Map of the Social Fabric Index
A history of community decline
The findings expose the way community has changed – and in many ways has declined – over the recent decades, leaving many parts of the UK with weak social institutions and networks and a falling sense of belonging:
• Fewer than half of people in the UK are now members of a group (48%). Just 10% are members of a working men’s or social club and 6% are members of a tenants’ or residents’ association, down 25% and 38% respectively since 1993, and regular church attendance has more than halved from 6.4 million in 1980 to 3.1 million in 2015. Membership of pensioner and professional membership groups, in contrast, has risen seven-fold and twelve-fold respectively since 1993.
• Between 2011 and 2017, the share of parents engaging in activities or outings with their children several times a week declined from 36% to 29%. Over the same period, the proportion who do so fewer than once a month rose from 34% to 40%. However, the number of 10-16 year olds having dinner with their family regularly has risen, from a third in 1995 to a half today.
• Even though the number of charities and donations are rising, the generosity of donations is in decline. In 2007-08, the average person donated £1 in every £100 they earned to charity. A decade later, in 2017-18, that figure had fallen by more than a quarter, to 73 pence.
• Communities are roughly half as likely (47%) to have a local post office than they were nearly two decades ago and three quarters (76%) as likely to have a local pub. This means that there are now only 7 pubs for every 10,000 adults, compared to 11 pubs per 10,000 adults a decade ago in 2010.
• Roughly three in ten people now live on their own, up from just one in twenty (5%) a century ago. Much of the recent increase in the proportion of the population living alone is men aged between 45-64, who account for 42% of the increase in single person households.
Widening inequality
The report also reveals how the decline in the social fabric has affected different places markedly more than others, with Onward’s Social Fabric Index revealing wide variation between local areas. In particular, it shows that:
• The places with the strongest social fabric are typically located in the South of England, especially in London’s rural commuter belt and parts of Scotland. Richmond upon Thames is the highest ranked area by social fabric, with Chiltern, South Oxfordshire, South Cambridgeshire, Rushcliffe, St Albans, Windsor and Maidenhead, East Renfrewshire and East Dunbartonshire following closely behind.
• The places with fraying social fabric are typically found in the Eastern coast of England, South Wales and the M62 corridor from Huddersfield to Grimsby. This includes post-industrial towns such as Middlesborough, Methyr Tydfil, Boston and Hartlepool as well as coastal communities such as Great Yarmouth, North East Lincolnshire and Blackpool.
• Places with a fraying social fabric are more likely to be politically volatile. Among the top tenth of places for social fabric, just 44% of people voted to Leave the EU, compared to 62% support for Brexit in the lowest tenth of places for social fabric. Red Wall constituencies and 2019 Conservative gains have social fabric scores that are not only 12% lower than the Conservative average, but 3% lower than Labour seats too.
• The growth of the private rented sector has contributed to declining social fabric. Just over 56% of people in social housing and 66% of homeowners feel that they belong to their area, compared to just 47% of private renters. In the areas with the strongest social fabric, stable tenures (owner occupied and social rent) have increased since 2001, while in the areas with the weakest social fabric, they have fallen by 8%.
Impact of COVID – a new generational divide
Meanwhile, polling alongside the report reveals that just two in five (42%) of 18-24 year olds feel more connected to their community than they did a month ago, compared to 52% when asked the same question just after lockdown started in March. This 10 point decline compares to a 13 point rise, from 53% to 66%, among 55-64 year olds over the same period. On average, 57% of people feel more connected to their community than they did a month ago.
Since March, the share of 18-24 year olds who trusted their neighbours fell by 10 percentage points (from 57% to 47%). In stark contrast, social trust among 55-64 year-olds increased by 12 percentage points (from 53% to 65%) and over-65s are now almost twice as likely to trust their neighbours than under-35s. On average, just over half of people say that they trust their neighbours to support them through this crisis.
Will Tanner, Director of Onward, said:
“We have instinctively known that communities have been fraying for decades but we have always struggled to measure how and in what ways.
“This has meant we have placed too much focus on what we can measure, rather than the social networks, institutions and norms which underpin our neighbourhoods and local places and give people a sense of belonging.
“Onward’s Social Fabric Index fills that gap, shining a light on the decline of community in Britain and identifying the places which need greatest attention from policymakers.”
The programme has a cross party steering committee including Danny Kruger MP (Conservatives), Jon Cruddas MP (Labour), Eilidh Whiteford, former MP (SNP) and is funded jointly by the JRF, Shelter and Power to Change. Further details at: www.ukonward.com/new-onward-research-repairing-our-social-fabric/

 

Briefings

What have we learned

The past six months have been like no other and a plea from the archivists at Glasgow Caledonian University is that whatever your community has done in response to Covid, keep some record of it and share your story with them at some point down the line. #KeepItDon'tDeleteIt is the trending hashtag.  While the folk at SURF may not be qualified archivists, they know a fair bit about regeneration and have carried out a remarkable job of recording the activities of more than 150 communities during the pandemic. SURF’s analysis highlights 10 key learning points. 

 

To read full report – click here

Since lockdown began in March 2020, SURF has been engaging with communities and organisations across Scotland and the cross sector organisations which support them. It has provided a platform for them to tell their stories of challenges, responses and resilience. Reports of these practical efforts have been published weekly on the SURF website, and as e-bulletins to SURF’s 3000 strong network.

These frontline responses – more than 150 of them – represent a unique resource, providing inspiring examples of the ways in which communities and their partners have responded nimbly and effectively to immediate needs. In doing so, they have demonstrated the practical potential for a more collaborative approach to community wealth building, based on authentic local assets and aspirations.

This report identifies common themes and lessons learned from those activities.  This practice based learning from SURF’s active network, is intended to help Scottish Government, and other key regeneration partners, to connect with, learn from and sustain these frontline examples of cooperative resilient action in place based communities.

 Learning Points  

  1. Volunteers form the life-blood of almost all the practical activities
  2. Mutual support – there have been powerful outcomes from newly formed collaborative partnerships
  3. Relaxing the rules – funder flexibility and the repurposing and adapting of existing programmes to meet demand, has encouraged agency, autonomy and reciprocal trust
  4. Extraordinary efforts have been made to meet an ongoing and increasing demand for imaginative, nourishing and fast responses to food insecurity. Literally millions of meals have been distributed across Scotland.
  5. The smallest of actions – posting a letter, a weekly telephone call – have the potential to be life-changing
  6. Pre-existing community based, assets, services, networks and interconnectivity have been crucial in setting up signposting and advice hubs
  7. Successful agencies are listening to what communities are asking for and are adapting their processes and priorities quickly to meet the demand.
  8. Scotland is not online. The impact of the digital divide in intensifying isolation and blocking knowledge exchange has been heightened
  9. Creativity has flourished – not only in terms of the benefits of ‘artistic’ approaches but in the imaginative and innovative processes which have been developed to resolve problems
  10. Heightened awareness of the potential mental health and wellbeing pressures exacerbated by the lockdown, has informed intelligent pre-emptive mitigating action

There has been some other early COVID19 research work, the conclusions of which reflect SURF’s own.  The Scottish Community Alliance conducted interviews with eight community led organisations.  The Scottish Community Development Centre (SCDC) produced a short report  illustrating what their community groups were experiencing in terms of pressures and suggested solutions.     SURF’s work is based on an unusually large and diverse range of participants (152) representing a broad cross-section and including contributions from every local authority area in Scotland.

Organisations which are part of SURF’s network were invited to contribute a minimum of 350 words describing in their own words their responses to the COVID crisis.  Initially this was viewed as a way of celebrating and sharing the resilience of communities across Scotland. However, it quickly became apparent that these narratives from the frontline provided a potentially valuable resource towards better understanding community assets and needs.  The learning in this report is based on analysis of those contributions.  Because the narratives are self-reported, rather than survey responses or a box ticking exercise, it may be that some of the identified themes have been under-reported.

To read full report – click here

Briefings

Where do volunteers go?

Although no one appears to be counting, it’s reasonable to assume that record numbers of people have found their way into some kind of volunteering role during the past six months. That being the case it also seems likely that a good number of these people might be looking to find ways of building on their new found skills and experiences. And therein lies a problem. Who offers that support?  In past years, the Cornwall based Eden Project has run training camps for activists. This year it’s gone online. Not as much fun perhaps but definitely more accessible.

 

Author: The Eden Project

If you’ve been involved in volunteering or community support over the last few months, you might be looking for new ways to stay connected. If you are, you’ll be excited to know that our friends at Eden Project Communities are taking their Community Camp online! Starting this October, the Community Camp is aimed at anyone wanting to make a difference in their community, and offers practical support to help you get started. Community Camp offers a mix of practical learning activities, workshops and networking opportunities for people from across the UK. It’s entirely free, and run through Zoom. Find out more here!

Information about the camp 

Application Form 

 

Briefings

Here’s to the next 10.

When a whole generation has grown up in the knowledge that the land they live on is owned by their community,  it’s probably fair to conclude that what was once a fanciful idea, scoffed at by many, has now become a firm fixture within Scotland’s (still skewed) pattern of land ownership. Last week, the national body for Scotland’s community landowners celebrated its 10th anniversary. This is a movement that is growing fast and across all parts of the country. A nice little film here to remind us of how it got to this point. Much more to come.

 

Author: John-Paul Holden, The Herald

STRETCHING across 56,000 acres of coast, agricultural land and moor on the Isle of Lewis, it is among Scotland’s most dynamic community-owned estates.

Yet when news emerged of a deadly and rapidly spreading new virus, the resourceful residents of Galson – many of them elderly – reacted with dread.

The day-to-day challenges facing those who live on the estate, which comprises 22 villages running from Upper Barvas to Port of Ness, some of them over 30 miles from the main town of Stornoway, were daunting even before Covid-19’s arrival and the imposition of a national lockdown.

“I think at the start of the pandemic that there was certainly a degree of fear,” said Lisa Maclean, Chief Executive of Galson Estate Trust.

“One of the main challenges around Covid was that our demographic is mostly towards older people.

“In the early phase of the pandemic, we were in a situation where a large number of our residents were in shielding categories. Another big issue is isolation.”

But if the disruption was unprecedented, so were the scale and speed of the community’s response.

Among the many emergency actions taken was the almost instant creation of a 40-strong team of volunteers, while a prescription deliveries service and WhatsApp groups ensured access to food and medicine.

“We took over the community newspaper when its staff were furloughed, just to ensure communication was still going out to residents because a lot of older people in the area are not online,” added Ms Maclean.

“We’ve been working… over the entire period from 2007 [when the estate passed into community ownership] to plan precisely what [was] needed and wanted. “That allowed us to respond appropriately and… we were able to agree a course of action very promptly as well.”

Galson is just one example of the exceptional resilience demonstrated by community landowners across Scotland during the coronavirus crisis. Now, as part of recovery efforts, the estate is to feature in a National  Lottery-funded study called Owning Our Future which will look at why the model has been so important to its pandemic response.

The success of communities in Glasgow, North Lanarkshire, the Scottish Borders, Wester Ross and Mull will also be examined.

Linsay Chalmers, Development Manager with Community Land Scotland (CLS), which has announced funding for the project, said: “Over the past six months, we’ve seen how effective the community land model is during a crisis.

“Through this project, we will be able to dig a little deeper into the reasons behind that and explore any learning for wider society.”

It comes as CLS celebrates its 10th anniversary with a special online event featuring presentations from Environment Secretary Roseanna Cunningham, as well as Isle of Eigg Heritage Trust, Nith Valley Leaf Trust and Viewpark Conservation Group.

Meanwhile, a range of community groups are being given the opportunity to take over local projects with £1.6 million from the Scottish Land Fund.

It is hoped the cash will help communities become more resilient and sustainable. Among the beneficiaries is North Edinburgh Arts Group, which has been given £156,000 to buy its current premises in Muirhouse.

Also celebrating is Kirkcolm Community Trust, whose members have received £53,000 to purchase and reopen the village shop and use it as a community hub. Ms Cunningham said the grants would “go towards projects that will provide locals with better access to green space, encourage wildlife and support community business”.

She added: “With this funding being awarded during Climate Week, I look forward to these projects seizing the opportunity to help our green recovery.”

John Watt, Scottish Land Fund Committee chairman, said: “Groups from all across Scotland are making a real impact to their communities.”