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In de UK is het veel gebruikelijker dat bewoners en bedrijven (mede)verantwoordelijk zijn voor hun directe leefomgeving. Premier David cameron maakt zich hard voor het ontwikkelen van de "Big Society" om locale gemeenteschappen meer kracht te geven. Onze hoofdspreker Steve Clare van Locality, een Britse netwerk van vijfhonderd buurtbeheerorganisaties, vertelt ons over zijn praktijkervaringen in de UK. Hoe zijn de locale bewoners actief in het beheer van hun buurt? Wat levert dat de buurten en de gemeente op? Met welke wetgeving en organisatievormen hebben ze dat voor elkaar gekregen? En wat kunnen wij in Nederland van hen leren? Doen wij al veel aan bewonersparticipatie, of staan wij pas aan het begin van een onomkeerbare verandering...?
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Over 500 members across England with almost £650m of community-owned assets – creating wealth in communities and keeping it there!
So what does the future hold…
The national context…
“BIG SOCIETY”
LOCALISM
COMMUNITY RIGHTS
Right to Re-shape: the model of implementation
Enabling people in the
community to help design and deliver services
Enabling community to support each other and themselves
Joining up services to
improve and transform
them
Getting the right services for the neighbourhood
BUILDING RESILIENT
COMMUNITIES
AND
IMPROVING SERVICES AND OUTCOMES IN
NEIGHBOURHOODS
Principles:
The four key components of
implementation:
A focus on the needs of the neighbourhood
Willingness to reshape services
Collaboration with the community
Partnership working between service
providers
“Public spaces are not a frivolity. They are just as important as hospitals and schools. They create a sense of belonging. This creates a different type of society. A society where people of all income levels meet in public spaces is a more integrated, socially healthier one.”
Enrique Peñalosa —former mayor of Bogotá, Colombia
Coin Street
Coin Street
Organisational form
CSCB: company limited by guarantee
Coin Street Secondary Housing Co-operative (CSS): Industrial & Provident Act Society
Coin Street Centre Trust (CSCT): company limited by guarantee registered with the Charity Commissioners.
Role of residents
Need to be local resident to be member of CSCB, CSCT or CSS
Service users – can get involved in planning/running services
Role of council
Greater London Council (now abolished) initially lent £1m to purchase site
Local authority – very little input initially. Now key partner
Heeley Millennium Park
Heeley Millenium Park
Organisational form
Heeley Development Trust: company limited by guarantee with charitable aims
Role of residents
HDT membership open to local residents. High levels of engagement.
Aiming to launch Park Membership Scheme in 2014
Role of councilCreated the problem and blocked the solution – often obstructive and unhelpful
Pros & consPeople taking responsibility when local state had no answers.
Green space management financially challenging
Green Estates
Green Estates
Organisational form
Social enterprise: partnership between the Manor and Castle Development Trust (MCDT), Sheffield Wildlife Trust (SWT), Sheffield City Council (SCC)
Role of residentsMembership of MCDT open to all residents
Wide range of volunteering opportunities
Programme beneficiaries
Role of council Key partner – but ‘equal’ partner
Pros & cons Viable partnership that brings together various ‘agendas’
Park Innovators
• Bloomsbury Square: levies on businesses
• Sheffield and Manchester: endowments
• Hackney: new services to businesses
• Bournemouth: digital technologies
• Liverpool: community management
• Burnley: alternative management approaches
• Edinburgh & Glasgow: digital mapping and engagement
• Bristol: training & skills development
Citizen Action
“You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete”R. Buckminster Fuller
Ingredients of Success
Imagine this…