Will you join Dave HWL and myself to look at the sites?
Hi Miss Marple,
OK, first of all please let me know which offensive picture or messages remain on the Yes facebook page. Anything deemed offensive is taken off.
[Note: posts relating to this item have been removed because they were becoming too personal and abusive. Admin]Secondly, the reason why I have not taken you up on your invitation is that I absolutely do not see the point of it. I know the site very well for starters having attended it as a night class student only last year, and can look at it on google maps to jog my memory. But also neither you, Dave nor I are experts on surveying, architecture, planning law or educational buildings (apart from Dave on that last one it seems) so what would we gain from pacing around it and being told again of some councillor statements buried away earlier in this thread?
Also, it's not like we've not met up already is it? I enjoyed debating with you in person back in September and I do admire the passion of people within MIA. Rather that than people who show no interest whatsoever in local matters or in politics on any level.
I don't agree with you on your underlying arguments though and unless Asda unveil plans for some hideous megastore I probably never will.
Finally, I do have some criticisms of the MIA campaign which I wish would be seen as constructive and not met with a wall of denials or just ignored. The recent newsletter has confirmed my suspicions that you need to do things better in my humble opinion. Especially if I was a donor I would be concerned that:
- There does not appear to be a published list of roles within the organisation, with contact names for each. It does appear to be a little 'shadowy' with tales of unknown people with 'greater insight' working tirelessly and right through Christmas. People come on here and post with two hats on. As soon as they are asked if they represent MIA they take that hat off.
- There appear to be no published accounts, or evidence of where donated money is being spent
- There appears to be a relationship with the Marple Civic society as donations are routed in this way. But this relationship does not appear to be formalised in writing, such that a suspicious person might think it has just been set up as a tax dodge. One would hope that Marple Civic society have some say in the running of MIA as a result and are 100% in approval of their messages and actions, but there is no transparency on this.
- There seems to be a 'word of mouth' culture whereby communication is done via a helpline with no audit trail of who said what to whom. This seems to be the way that evidence is presented too (this person heard someone say this in a meeting and told this person who told MIA etc). If a donor or anyone else wanted an email or other written conversation with MIA, how would they go about this?
- Written communication when done via the newsletters does not seem to have any quality control, see the model letter on the last one
- It is quite easy to think that MIA is primarily driven by protectionism on the part of local shopkeepers. Indeed, the message on the MIA website was toned down as a result of this. But having the co-op display a 'No' poster is a serious own goal. Stating that 'well the co-op has always been big in Marple' is not sufficient as a response either as it smacks of resistance to change
Like I said, I hope these points can get a measured response from someone in MIA and can be seen as constructive criticism. The last thing needed as a response is 'Well why aren't the Yes campaign doing this?' because the answer to that is obvious. The Yes campaign do not accept donations.
By accepting donations you make yourselves a lot more accountable and responsible and I would hope that by addressing the above points you can establish a level of governance which an active donor would expect. You may indeed be working very hard, but maybe you need to work a little smarter.
As stated previously in many places, the Yes campaign was never intended to be a mirror image of MIA. It states that quite clearly on the FB page. Indeed, people in favour of something act very differently from those against something, and the Yes campaign has to embrace this. It is basic human nature and has been referenced elsewhere in these threads but again can be seen very clearly in the reactions of the general public to government cuts and recent public sector strikes. Actually, I won't ask you to trawl through the forum, you can find the discussion on this here:
http://www.marple-uk.com/smf/index.php?topic=3962.15Finally, I sense a little bit of vitriol creeping back in. Not really the time of year for it! The last thing anyone needs is for any campaigning to get personal and that all contributions to debates on local public life are better than none at all.
Merry Christmas