Kings Heath is a rather nondescript suburb of Birmingham - formerly solidly "working class" when that term meant people lived there who actually worked. The area is large but most Brummies define Kings Heath as the long High Street straddling one of the city's main arterial routes, the busy A435,
As with High Streets elsewhere, Kings Heath's has struggled in recent times but hangs on thanks to the large throughput of traffic and its position on a number of bus routes. The writer regularly shops there and notes that it retains a distinct down-market feel where the elderly and underclass still go about their business.
Closing Down ... |
Brum may have reached the zenith in respect of its huge university population. But even the "intelligensia" cannot afford houses in Harborne and Edgbaston and the intensely left-wing academic diaspora has, unfortunately, began to migrate to Kings Heath, which these w****** now call a "burb" FFS! The gentrification of the area has brought some benefits - the Early Bird cafe (think women with buggies and laptops) and the award-winning Hop'n'Scotch boozer (think bearded men in woolly hats) for two - but the toxic and paradoxical mix of embourgeoisement and socialism is now a serious pollutant. A vociferous claque of Labour politicians and anti-capitalist cronies has set about destroying the status quo and replacing it with assorted "community" (i.e. taxpayer-funded) offerings in a car-free environment.
The claque is rabidly anti-motorist and has been busy creating and advocating "Low Traffic Neighbourhoods" so that the bourgeoisie can enjoy their new properties free of the traffic now clogging the streets where the "poor" live. This has all been slightly problematic given how busy the main road is but the "socialists" decided to wreck local businesses as much as possible by discouraging people from driving to KH and then making it impossible to park for those who brave the trip. They used the Covid pandemic to narrow the High Street itself and to block further parking outside the shops. And the icing on the cake was the complete closure to traffic of the dismal York Road so that on the rare occasions when the sun shines the area can be used for community events. Thus the summer sees the new local bourgeoisie out in force sipping lagers/gins and listening to some honking jazz band whilst the rest of the year the diminishing number of shops and food joints sit forlornly behind barricades of concrete blocks as if a terrorist attack is imminent.
But it doesn't stop there as regulation and interference never does where socialists congregate. Now a local anti-car zealot and a "community organisation" - Our Scene CIC - have taken to advising the very shops the claque is seeking to destroy on how to conduct their businesses.
The aforementioned zealot, Birmingham University employee Simon Dixon, took to social media to advise retailers to do more for disabled shoppers - seemingly forgetting that many disabled folks are er, drivers. (Dixon infamously took to social media to liken motorists to serial-killers!)
But soon afterwards, up-popped social enterprise [sic] outfit Our Scene CIC stating that KH businesses should "improve access" for the 26,856 folk within 2 miles of the High Street who it says "self-identify" as being disabled. They put an image on social media saying their campaign was funded by (a) HM Government - i.e. the taxpayer; (b) Labour Birmingham City Council - currently in the local government equivalent of bankruptcy yet splurging taxpayers' cash on this; (c) West Midlands Combined Authority - i.e. the taxpayer: and (d) the local BID (Business Improvement District [sic]) - i.e. funded by extra taxation via a levy on local businesses. (Incidentally, not long ago hard-pressed shopkeepers voted to scrap the BID but it re-ran the ballot and "won" by one vote. Bingo!)
Once again Our Scene were, like Dixon, silent on the fact that many disabled folk are drivers.
This "community group" is operated as a "Community Interest Company" and so is not beholden to the community at all, but only to the eight active Directors of the Company. It seems to be entirely out of touch with the economic uncertainties facing many of the Kings Heath shopkeepers. In any event, the vast majority of the shops are leasehold premises and shopkeepers are likely to need their landlords' permission to improve access, and are also highly unlikely to incur expenditure if their leases have little time left to run.
The wretched BID is being paid to improve the commercial environment for retailers and I was amazed that this self-appointed CIC had taken it upon itself to start hounding the shopkeepers. I decided to look into Our Scene and the research does not make happy reading.
This outfit was only set-up in 2021 and yet the eight active Directors purport to represent the Kings Heath community - or at least parts of it. Just by way of contrast a number of shopkeepers - like the aforementioned butcher - have been serving the KH community for decades.
The last available accounts (to October 2023) show current assets of £19,541 but current liabilities (more on which anon) of £19,288 leaving the outfit in the black (and with reserves) of just £253. In short, this is a p*sspot organisation and hardly "enterprising" - socially or otherwise. Further it is clearly not in a position to offer grants itself to the hard-pressed shopkeepers.
And are the folk of Kings Heath rushing to donate to this "community group" - alas not. The CIC - which seems to be involved in a lot of knitting activities which somehow need the intervention of a paid organisation to happen - took grants from the National Lottery, the Co-op, "Local Living" (whoever they are), and government quango Sport England. Then comes the inevitable grant from Labour's bankrupt Birmingham City Council to "celebrate communities" and a year-long contract with the same bankrupt body to deliver the socialist-sounding "Neighbourhood Action Co-ordination Pilot".
They managed to extract £90,000 from these donors - principally us taxpayers. "Stakeholders" included local politicians. Of course, none of these organisations gave cash directly to shopkeepers to improve access (if such was needed).
Unlike charities where the trustees usually give their time and expertise free of charge a CIC can pay its directors. Their own Form CIC 34 states that four Directors received small payments as follows:
£1,690.00 - Andy Phelps; £1662.50 - Zed Bhatti; £375 - Valerie Smith; £1,628.00 - Lucy Hilliage.
Sub-total - £5,355.50
Now comes the gobsmacker - a stonking £30,920.47 was paid to Director and "Chief Executive" "lol" of this small "community" organisation - a fair proportion of which was a forced shakedown by Birmingham City Council of taxpayers. And this is a lot more than many Kings Heath shopkeepers would have cleared in that year.
Total remuneration to Directors - £35,645.97
Do the math, as they say. Of £90,000 granted for community use a whopping 39.60% was siphoned off to the Directors! Nice work if you can get it. Lucky Kings Heath and Brandwood [not].
This shocking state of affairs is why we support the Thurd Sector Manifesto set out below.
(Oh and by the way - this is the offices of the CIC's accountants. Perhaps Our Scene will investigate disabled access here?)
The Thurd Sector Manifesto
The so-called Third Sector is supposed to consist of non-governmental, non-profit organisations that are not part of the public or private sectors. Of course, many do valuable work but many are also highly-politicised and seem to simply be vehicles for the bourgeoisie to make money.
The Thurd Sector includes charities, social enterprises, mutuals, CIC’s (community interest companies), co-operatives, community groups, associations and self-help groups. But long gone are the days when most of these organisations raised funds by way of voluntary donations from philanthropic citizens. Now, very many receive forced donations from us taxpayers via the government and/or local councils.
Many of you would decline to donate to some of the political fronts or useless organisations that will feature here, but you have NO CHOICE. You are forced to donate through the taxes you pay. There is little or no accountability in this sector, and YOU have no way of understanding whether YOUR money has been well spent.
Even some large organisations are rabidly political (Sense, for example, diverted £6,000 of the funds entrusted to their safekeeping for the benefit of disabled folk to attack Liz Truss!) The people earning a living through these organisations are overwhelmingly pro-Labour anti-capitalists - although they are not averse to enriching themselves (see some of the Labour politicians in places like Sandwell for example). And across the UK politicians have ensured a steady flow of OUR money to their cronies.
Organisations such as the Charity Commission are supine and so there is no or no proper regulatory oversight of the activities of even major charities let alone local political fronts. The “Sector” also enjoys favourable treatment in respect of taxation.
And needless to say, our grotesque “Royal” Family seek the kudos of being associated with many of these organisations. The supposedly left-leaning staff of these bodies abase themselves to the monarchy in the expectation of receiving baubles.
This MANIFESTO calls for a Commission to reassess the whole framework of charities and supposedly “voluntary” organisations, and to create a unified and accountable structure instead of the legislative hotchpotch that exists today. Sitting above this must be a regulator - with teeth - to ensure that the sector operates fairly and openly, particularly when in receipt of taxpayers’ hard-earned cash.
We also call for the Commission to examine the harm arising from the seemingly frequent misapplication of scarce economic resources to this plethora of organisations.
Please feel free to email if there are any Thurd Sector bodies you would like us to take a look at.
Published by Ian Crow Multimedia Limited
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