charity

Equality South West - Another Fake Charity

Showing us bloggers how the job is really done, the proper journalists over at Bristol 24/7 report on the Dita Von Teese kerfuffle. Sadly the crack news-gathering team incorrectly attributed quotes to Cllr Helen Holland that were actually made by a different Helen, and then rang up a local fake charity for a rent-a-quote. Other than that they did a sterling job. <mode type=smug>ON</mode>

esw

Campaign group Equality South West told JackFM: “This amounts to a public body spending  public money on the gratuitous debasement of women. Bristol City Council has a legal obligation to promote equality so should be supporting women, not demeaning them.

“This is a disappointing mistake by Bristol City Council, and we sincerely hope they change their mind and stop the stripper from attending.”

So say Equality South West. But who are they? According to their web page:

Equality South West (ESW) is a registered charity and England's first regional equality and diversity body.  We are pleased to be supported by a range of key strategic organisations including: the South West Regional Development Agency, the Government Office for the South West, the South West Regional Assembly, South West Forum and the South West Trade Union Congress.

Looking at their accounts at the Charity Commission, in 2008/9 ESW had an income of £432,874, a stonking great 68% increase from the previous year. That includes over a quarter of a million from the South West Regional Development Agency, for a total haul over the last year of a few pennies under six hundred thousand quid. Would you like to guess how much of that came from non-grant voluntary donations?

Thus we can clearly see that Equality South West is a fake charity, and would better be described as a subcontracted department of the South West Regional Development Agency. So perhaps ESW should keep schtum during the electoral period then. Via SWRDA:

Pre-election communications restrictions

As the election has been called for 6 May 2010, the South West RDA (like other publicly funded bodies) is now in a statutory restrictive pre-election period.

During this time, we cannot make announcements or statements or promote our work and projects in any way that could influence, or be seen to influence, the election result, or that could compete with parliamentary candidates for the attention of the public.

Although our work continues, we will not issue any press releases until after the election. Any information published on our website, Twiitter [sic] feed or new media site during this time will be factual updates only.

For further information on the pre-election period please look at cabinet office guidance.

Charity is its own reward

One of the most well known political blogs in the UK is the Devil’s Kitchen. It’s not family-friendly, but DK’s posts are certainly cathartic to read, and probably more-so to write. DK has been branching out into investigative work, and along with a few compatriots has created a new web service - FakeCharities.org.

The premise of FakeCharties.org is to create a database of organisations that are nominally “charitable” but in fact exist largely as agencies of the government.

[FakeCharities.org] ask two questions when deciding whether to add a charity to this database:

  1. Does the charity receive more than 10% of its income from the tax-payer AND/OR receive more than £1,000,000 a year from the tax-payer?
  2. Is the charity engaged in lobbying the government and/or influencing government policy?

We not talking small change either; millions of pounds are being passed around. Reading this got me thinking about the charitable sector in Bristol.

InfluenceBristol

(Diagram: Influence in the City of Bristol)

You may be aware (I mention it quite a lot) that I’m standing for election to Bristol City Council, and so like every other candidate I get a few bits of candidate-specific junk mail such as details of ceremonies, timetables and where to go (should I win) to pick up first prize of a blackberry and a laptop.

One other item I have received this year is an A3 calendar from Voscur – Bristol’s “Council for Voluntary Service”. That is how it styles itself these days, although originally, Voscur was the “Voluntary Organisations Standing Conference On Urban Regeneration“. The calendar is very nice – lots of pretty pictures of Bristol, and wibble about “extending agendas”, “website toolkits” and of course “diversity”. It also includes the summary financial accounts of the organisation.

 IMG_0014

Voscur, based at the CREATE Centre, is not a charity but rather a limited company (#03918210) that acts as a trade body for local voluntary sector groups. Or “third sector" groups as it is fashionable to call them these days. [Update: I’m behind the times. The fashionable term is now vcse sector – Voluntary, Community & Social Enterprise] Voscur’s rebranding as a Council for Voluntary Services is a reinvention of a concept that the City Council dumped in the mid-eighties:

The previous Bristol Council for Voluntary Services (BCVS) closed shortly after Bristol City Council removed its core grant in 1987. The closure of BCVS was an acrimonious affair, although it was generally recognised that the organisation was not fulfilling the needs and aspirations of the local voluntary sector.

Having taken over the BCVS role, Voscur now offers training courses, provides consultancy to charities and runs events. It also promotes and administers a few schemes and initiatives for local government, including Bristol’s Neighbourhood Partnerships. Despite being a membership organisation, a quick perusal of Voscur Ltd’s accounts reveals that over 90% of its income is derived from public sector grants – £626,787 – whereas only £16,505 is obtained from members’ subscriptions. Public sector funders include Bristol City Council, the European Union, the Lottery of course, and various bits of Whitehall apparatus.

Personally I don’t need the services that Voscur provide, hence I am not a member. But nevertheless, like all local taxpayers I am contributing towards its running costs. The fifteen employees of this non-profit organisation, earning an average wage of £25,900 - slightly below the UK median wage, but higher than median Bristol wage - may well provide a useful service to local charities and (sigh) social entrepreneurs, in which case the management team should investigate a more sustainable income model in which their customers pay for services directly.

On a more general note, something has gone wrong with charity in the UK. Early last year, when commenting on 2008’s Council budget crisis [don’t worry if you missed it, there will be another one along soon], I wrote about the situation:

We have a problem with the "Third Sector" in Britain, in that it has become more and more dependent on the state for funding. One can understand why charitable giving is down, with 40% of British wages being taken in tax, but the net effect has been a vicious cycle in which voluntary organisations - starved of voluntary funding - become vassals of government. On a positive note, the largest private charitable foundation in the world, the Rotary Foundation, still maintains its independence.

The long term goal for anyone with a bit of common sense must be to restore independence to charities which can only come through cutting off state funding (see the Burning Our Money blog for more analysis). But doing it all in one go - attractive as that might seem to the radical - leaves a lot of well-meaning people in the lurch. We've seen the outcome of the "Cold Turkey" effect recently in Bristol with the winding down of local Third-sector welfare from two large grant-giving central funds – the Neighbourhood Fund and the Working Neighbourhoods Fund, both in control of Whitehall.

It’s not just about reducing taxes – although that is important – but about independence of thought and action. He who pays the piper, calls the tune.

So I’ll be keeping an eye out for any local candidates to be submitted to the FakeCharities.org database. If you know of any, have a look at their statutory accounts in the Register of Charities at the website of the Charity Commission and submit them yourself.

Related Links

Fireworks Fiesta 2008

Did you catch the Bristol Charity Fireworks Fiesta over the weekend? The Rotary Club of Bristol was on duty at Gate 4, at which we got around 750 punters and a nice four figure sum for local good causes. Bristol Lions were at Gate 5; I didn't catch the other teams, but the whole thing was arranged by the Rotary Club of Clifton and the Bristol Roundtable.

It was a somewhat damp affair admittedly - our secretary has a rain gauge in his back garden and he reckons we got 13mm on Saturday 1st Nov 2008, plus 19mm on the previous Thursday.

 

From Fireworks Night


(Photography question: How do you take photos of people wearing high visibility jackets at night when you've got a huge portable flood lamp behind you? This is the least worst of my efforts).

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