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Community organisations pledge to help revive political engagement

MEDIA RELEASE

A social enterprise and community group in Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent have endorsed the findings of the Governance Commission and pledged to play their part in reviving local democracy.

Social Media CIC, publisher of social enterprise newspaper Local Edition, and HAVOC, a community group based in Burslem, will submit their own responses to the City Council on what they can offer to help bridge the divisions identified by the Commission, who collected evidence from local people and groups and identified serious failings in local governance.

HAVOC spokesman Hugh Irvine said: “So-called “leaders” decry apathy, but they are currently so far removed from their electorate that they do not realise that the people are far from apathetic, even after the Schools débacle, the Dimensions fiasco, and the “Hole-in-the-Wall” U-turn. All of these sagas were preventable. However, the Council leadership carried on in their “we are right and everybody else is wrong” mode, and made bad decisions. All they had to do was talk, and listen, to the common man before announcing their decisions.”

Editor of Local Edition Clare-Marie White said: “The findings of the Commission echoed with what we hear working within the communities of Northern Stoke-on-Trent. While all of us will have our own views on
the proposals and will be involved in the discussions over the summer, I think the most important thing is to help create the new structures to enable everyone to get involved at whatever level they want to, so they’re no longer left out by political leaders and not stuck in this negative cycle. The City Council have a very clear message now and must take whatever steps are necessary to improve community engagement.”

Any groups, individuals etc are welcome if they wish to add their names to the statement or adapt it for their own use. Social Media CIC has also launched a social networking website (www.socialmedia.org.uk) which gives community groups and individuals free space to communicate and connect with each other online.

We endorse the findings of the Governance Commission presented to John
Healy, Local Government Minister in May 2008.

We will do what we can to help engage people in our networks in the debate that must now follow. We will take our place as a partner organisation to help revive political involvement and reconnect people with decision-makers, whether elected or otherwise.

We demand that the City Council act immediately to do everything necessary to re-engage all of Stoke-on-Trent’s communities in its work at every single level, but most especially between political leaders and communities, in order to rebuild the trust that has been lost.

We pledge to support the closing statement of the Governance Commission:
“The full potential of Stoke-on-Trent’s future will
only be realised by the shared commitment of
every citizen supporting visionary leadership
by the elected Council”

Supported by the following organisations:
Social Media CIC. Recommendations
Hamil Area Voice of the Community (HAVOC). Response.

Background:
Social Media CIC is a social enterprise operating in Burslem, Stoke-on-Trent. It publishes Local Edition, a free newspaper that seeks to improve information and communication in Northern Stoke-on-Trent. Social Media’s recommendations:
http://socialmediauk.wordpress.com/2008/05/29/recommendations-for-the-council-to-rebuild-engagement-from-social-media-cic/
HAVOC is a community group working to give a voice to communities in the Haywood area of Stoke-on-Trent. It has run two successful campaigns to prevent the closure of Haywood High School and Dimensions and has recently been invited to join the council’s Overview & Scrutiny Committee. HAVOC’s response: http://www.havocinstoke.org.uk/governancecommission.html

Recommendations for the Council to rebuild engagement from Social Media CIC

Further to the Governance Commission’s report last week, Social Media CIC is endorsing its recommendations and pledging to play its part in reviving local democracy. It should be made clear that this is not an attempt to be political but rather to contribute to a stronger civil society in order that the problems of our area can be improved.

Every different group and individual has something to offer this process. What we can offer follows:
- Local Edition provides a forum to inform debate in the Northern Stoke area. This can be used more effectively by all organisations working in the area. We will find different ways to present the findings of the report and feed back responses.
- Our website, www.socialmedia.org.uk, provides free space for community groups across the city to create a presence online and where residents, politicians and anybody else can connect with each other and post news and information about their activities
- Social Media CIC has developed a range of relationships with networks and groups across the city and can support constructive community engagement through these networks
- Through our different projects, we are able to provide connections to different groups of people in Northern Stoke and a two-way flow of viewpoints to contribute to dialogue. We hope to develop our capacity over the coming months to do more.
- We can provide expertise on structure-building from community to global level, drawing on experience of contributing to, and working with, successful volunteer-based groups in the City and further afield.

Our recommendations to the Council are also around the recommendation to rebuild engagement. This is not supposed to detract from the very hard work that many councillors and officers put in, but address the way that people feel because of structural failures and in some cases a lack of basic communication and consultation.

- Resource residents and other community groups at local levels, continuing the good work over the past year, and encouraging residents to fill gaps that currently exist. Ensure that the most appropriate sectors of the council maintain regular dialogue with all groups operating in their area or work.

- ensure you have meaningful dialogue with community groups on all decisions affecting the area, not only on those that suit you. Don’t avoid discussion on decisions that you think will be controversial. Get people involved in new strategies right from the beginning and don’t shut them out at critical points – not everybody will want to be involved in policy discussions but some people will and they can help convey questions and information both ways. We have had large voids of silence while some of the biggest decisions are being made and this gives rise to suspicion.

- Accept responsibility for the fact that people are disengaged and angry, therefore the problem is not necessarily the decisions being made, but the way in which they are made. A culture of trust is the only effective way that everybody can contribute to society.

- send out regular information on all decisions and actions made by councillors and officers through online newsfeeds that can also be printed out as posters in libraries. An interesting model is the Twitter feed started by Gordon Brown’s office that anybody can subscribe to.

- Be experimental and imaginative. Release council officers from the culture of fear and control that contributes to an environment of secrecy, lack of trust and the external perception of inneffectiveness. Create simple systems of accountability through councillors and balance this with practices that support officers to carry out their difficult work for the city.

- Introduce participatory budgeting elements immediately for ward budgets so that the whole community can work alongside councillors in spending it. Extend participatory methods to all local service delivery, piloting models of participation to find what works in our communities. Over the years, residents in the area have built a degree of expertise in consultation practices and there are many community leaders ready and willing to be participate positively – more will follow once the atmosphere of conflict and mistrust begins to clear and people see that their input leads to results (there are residents who have been involved in consultations about the regeneration of their area since the early 1970s).

- Immediately develop clear illustrations of decision-making so that anybody who wants to get involved at any level can easily find out the best route to participation (including online and other means) and have their views taken forward

- Accept that there is a distinct difference between promoting Stoke-on-Trent and facilitating effective debate and accountability. Local media can be a constructive partner in both.

- Abandon the PR strategy outlined in last year’s recruitment process of rebuttal and ‘good news’ stories. Help journalists to communicate political processes effectively to the public by answering questions and providing information pro-actively and on request. Good press for the city will follow as the health of the city in every sphere improves.

- Publish all Freedom of Information requests in order to avoid duplication and, if practical, archive released material in the most relevant public library (ie requests about Tunstall in Tunstall).

- Ensure that every councillor builds engagement at local ward level and create strategies for ensuring that there are efficient systems for all residents to communicate meaningfully with their councillor and have their concerns and ideas passed on. Find out what local people think makes a ‘good councillor’ and share examples of good practice, whichever party they come from.
STATEMENT
We welcome the findings of the Governance Commission presented to John Healy, Local Government Minister in May 2008.

We will do what we can to help engage people in our networks in the debate that must now follow. We will take our place as a partner organisation to help revive political involvement and reconnect people with decision-makers, whether elected or otherwise.

We demand that the City Council act immediately to do everything necessary to re-engage all of Stoke-on-Trent’s communities in its work at every single level, but most especially between political leaders and communities, in order to rebuild the trust that has been lost.

We pledge to support the closing statement of the Governance Commission:
“The full potential of Stoke-on-Trent’s future will
only be realised by the shared commitment of
every citizen supporting visionary leadership
by the elected Council”

- Social Media CIC.

Social Media CIC

It was all getting so sprawling, we needed to make a map. Explore the world of Social Media CIC here.

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