Sarah Paton
It`s all about new
relationships…Teresa May getting a new relationship with Europe after the
Brexit upheaval, and here in Carlisle, Riverside Housing Association`s Sarah
Paton getting a new relationship with the city after an upheaval on Merseyside.
The Prime Minister is keeping her
cards close to her chest in her negotiations to get a good deal for Britain. No
such luck for Ms Paton who is Riverside`s North Region Director. Her cards have
been marked by her bosses in the Liverpool
head office.
Her cards are not a pretty hand.
Ms Paton, six weeks into the job
learned this when she left her base on Tyneside and travelled 60 miles to the Flensburg Room in Carlisle Civic Centre to talk to city
councillors about those marked cards and
the Riverside plans they indicate. It
was a meeting of the council`s Community Overview and Scrutiny Panel.
The plans are designed to save
money- £30 million a year. The Carlisle operation-involving 6,000 city tenants
and leaseholders- is being cut back as part of the Merseyside upheaval and city
is planned to have its Riverside governing board removed following the recent
abolition of the post of Carlisle regional director.
The board- and the regional director- have existed for 14 years, since the time
that Riverside took over the city`s council houses. Among the board`s members are four city councillors. Getting rid of that
board is not going to be easy, Ms Paton learned.
Not easy because as far as the
council is concerned, the four councillors
will continue to sit on that board until
something is in its place. And the city council it appears does not want
that to happen. So the board at the
moment is in limbo.
In limbo too is the relationship
between the council and Riverside because the Flensburg Room meeting settled
nothing except a decision to hold another meeting in January.
The council hopes that the
January meeting will result in what it
calls a “meaningful relationship” with Riverside following the fractious
relationship of the last couple of years.
Ms Paton left the Flensburg Room after her power point presentation
and headed back to Tyneside with echoes in her ears of that fractious relationship
that had surfaced in the meeting.
These echoes included:
1, many tenants` problems that
Riverside had failed to address;
2 |
Community failure- Coun Bloxham |
3, and Riverside`s failure to engage with local Carlisle communities.
This community failure was the
subject of much criticism, particularly
from Councillor Ray Bloxham who led the council house handover operation to
Riverside 14 years ago. He said: “The one thing we were impressed with about
Riverside at that time and the crucial factor in our chosing Riverside was its commitment to community involvement.”
Carlisle Tenants` and Residents`
Federation publishes this blog. Information about the Federation is available
on 01228 522277 or 01228 532803.
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