Sarah Paton and
`one farce after another`
Theresa May has her problems with the Brexit
negotiations and with a new relationship with Europe. Housing boss Sarah Paton has her
problems with her Carlisle negotiations and a new relationship with the city.
Ms Paton met sceptical Carlisle
councillors a few days ago.She has been left wondering how to convince
those councillors and other critics that
her flawed Riverside Housing Association
can be trusted in any new relationship.
Riverside has a bad relationship with Carlisle
councillors. So bad that the councillors are not slow to say that they to rue
the day sixteen years ago that the city`s council houses were privatised and
handed to Riverside, a Liverpool-based organisation.
And the councillors are also not slow to say much
the same thing about another planned Riverside
takeover .That takeover is of the Workington-based Impact Housing Association
and fears are now being expressed that based on the Carlisle experience, Riverside`s
gross inefficiency and bossiness will spread like a virus
to Workington.
The meeting with councillors took place when Ms
Paton addressed the city council`s Economic Growth Scrutiny Panel in her role
of Riverside`s North Regional Director. She presented a report in which she outlined future board arrangements with the council.
These arrangements are needed because Riverside has
abandoned the farce of its Carlisle regional board which suposedly had run the
city`s Riverside houses since the housing
handover in 2002. In fact the board served no obvious purpose because it
was accountable to no-one, was unable to deal with complaints and never appeared
to achieve anything.
Not surprising, what Ms Paton proposes as a
replacement to the farcical regional board is something just as farcical. And
that upset councillors at the panel meeting.
In place of the regional board, Riverside proposes
what it calls a north regional liaison group with representatives from the
council and Riverside. It will “discuss matters that are important to our
customers and to Carlisle communities.But it will not be part of the Riverside
formal governance structure,” said Ms Paton`s report.
The councillors wanted to know what powers the liaison group would actually have and how tenants would be represented in the new set- up.
They were not satisfied with what Ms Paton had on offer.
”We have to make sure that tenants have a voice” said Tory Councillor Michael Mitchelson(left).
This view was echoed by Labour Councillor Pam Birks(right)
She said: “We need something that gives us some teeth to cater for those in need.
" We have to make sure that our representation on any planned body is not just cursory.”
And panel vice-chairman Steven Bowditch(left),(Labour) reminded members of the farcical regional board, now abandoned.
He said that in the past he had taken up complaints about Riverside but could not get them dealt with locally.
”Each time, I had to go to the very top of that organisation to get them dealt with. That cannot be right.”
MR ADRIAN WAITE, THE FORMER CHAIRMAN OF IMPACT AND ANOTHER PROMINENT CRITIC OF RIVERSIDE, CONTINUES HIS ATTACK ON THE SECRECY SURROUNDING ARRANGEMENTS FOR THE MERGER OF IMPACT AND RIVERSIDE.
HE IS ALSO CONCERNED THAT THE IMPACT BOARD HAS ABANDONED
IMPACT`S VALUES AND HAS ALSO ABANDONED IMPACT`S TENANTS.
HERE IS WHAT HE SAYS IN HIS RECENT BLOGS:
“ Along with others, I
have expressed concern about the secrecy with which the process is being
conducted and the lack of engagement with the shareholding members of Impact
(of which I am one), Impact’s tenants and the communities in which Impact
works.
“Last Thursday, Impact
finally agreed to meet with shareholding members for two briefing meetings –
one in Workington and the other in Penrith. I attended the meeting in Penrith
and despite being disturbed about some aspects of it, found it interesting on many
levels. However, at the end of the meeting shareholding members were told to
keep all the information that had been discussed secret and consequences were
threatened for anyone who did not!
“I would be interested
to know how Impact reconciles this secretive approach with the letter that Mark
Costello, the current Chair, wrote in the ‘Cumberland News’ last week that was
headed: ‘Secrecy accusations unfounded and unhelpful’.
“In this blog and in my
letter to the ‘Cumberland News’ last week I urged tenants to apply to become
shareholding members of Impact so that they could have a vote on Impact’s
future. Impact Housing Association has always encouraged tenants to become
members and I understand that over the last few weeks, several tenants have
applied to join. However, Impact has abandoned this policy of many years and is
now refusing membership to any new applicants including te.
“Impact have confirmed
that there will be no tenant ballot. Instead there will only be an advisory
consultation that the board will be free to ignore.
“Based on the Penrith
meeting, it also appears to me that there has been a change in the ‘culture’ of
Impact. When I first joined Impact and when I was Chair we welcomed different
points of view and, even when people had serious disagreements, any discussion
was conducted in an environment of mutual respect. However, it now appears to
me that the board, management team and their consultants are not interested in
other people’s opinions; and people who are concerned about the current
direction of Impact or who would like more information are treated with
disdain.
“I think that this
situation represents an abandonment of Impact’s values and Impact’s tenants by
the board”.
Carlisle Tenants` and Residents` Federation publishes this blog. Information about the Federation is available on 01228 522277 or 01228 532803
Carlisle Tenants` and Residents` Federation publishes this blog. Information about the Federation is available on 01228 522277 or 01228 532803