community

Climate Change and Creativity

Youth Action in March 2024:

Our Youth Social Action throughout February and March has been focused upon tackling climate change, encouraging biodiversity and facilitating learning through creativity and public arts projects. We are grateful for the Climate Change Seed Funding we received from Forth Environment Link as this has enabled us to collaborate with the  local schools, the Youth Action Group , Scottish Canals, Tamfourhill Community Hub and local volunteers. This approach has allowed the SCYAP to tackle local  environmental issues and priorities in a creative way and in that respect I would like to thank our Community Artist Sarah Diver for her amazing inputs with the ongoing recycled bottle lids public mural project and her T-Shirt making at our Fab Feb  climate change  workshops.  We have also worked closely with Scottish canals Environmental Manager  Olivia Lassiere  and Rebecca at their activities team who have significantly contributed to our Climate & Biodiversity Action Day at the Falkirk  Wheel, our citizen science and towpath pollinator planting sessions  and with several paddle pick-ups along the canal through Camelon and Tamfourhill.  Encouraging active travel and the notion of the low traffic neighbourhood has also been on our agenda and it has been inspirational to work with @MakeitGlasgow from the wonderful Maryhill, who have been facilitating the creation and design of much required seating through the creation of six new benches for the canals towpaths. This Project has been enthusiastically supported by the Youth Action Groups  from Carmuirs and Easter Carmuirs Primary Schools and the Community based Youth Action Group who have all been identifying themes through a mapping process and then designing and making ceramic and clay tiles for these new benches. The FEL funding has thus provided us with addionality to our ongoing Youth Action Programmes and enables aspects of our community development approach to be underpinned with improved biodiversity and very practical  environmental improvement activities for young people which are also aligned to our Community Climate Action Plan. In addition, Rachel Timblin as part of her involvement with the Scottish Wildlife Trusts Pioneers Programme has been able to also support some community activities that have involved planting pollinators and building bird boxes and involved groups from Tamfourhill Community Hub, SCYAP and the Camelon Early Years and Childcare Centre.  

The groups from the local schools are all being supported to complete Dynamic Youth Awards and this approach is demonstrating how experiential learning and wider achievement can be recognised and effectively accredited. This wider community development approach is  evident within all of our current Youth Action Projects where strong links between young people , the wider community, local agencies and the schools are being established. Here are some key examples of local youth action that have been happening over the last 6 weeks:

The Recycled Bottle Top Mural Project

  The Recycled Bottle Top Mural Project involves groups from Carmuirs Primary School , the Community based Youth Action Group and a group from Falkirk High School who are all tackling the problem of littering  and in particular the environmental damage caused by  plastic bottle tops. Climate Change and environmental improvement were key issues that young people had identified  in the summer of 2023 through their involvement with the Safer Communities Youth Action Projects Development plan.

The recycled bottle tops mural project is funded in part by Forth Environment links Climate Change Seed funding. Tackling climate change creatively is the focus of this project where the different groups of young people have carried out community litter picks and gathered plastic bottle lids and instead of them ending up in landfill to take hundreds of years to breakdown are being used to create a community mural which itself will contribute to community improvement. This is an  upcycling project which is facilitating young people’s expressive and creative skills, improving the environment whilst raising awareness of climate change at a community  level. This Youth Social Action approach has a dual benefit  where there is community improvement and also a direct benefit to the participating young people where their involvement has enabled them to gain Dynamic Youth and Saltire Awards which are nationally recognised certificates of achievement

The New Canal Benches Project with We Make  It Glasgow.

This Project began with groups from the local primary schools and the community YAG mapping out the  local canals and the key locations and sites in their community. We looked at different perspectives of the canal, its central role through the history of Camelon and Tamfourhill , its polluted past and its more recent regeneration as a location for recreation, active travel and improved biodiversity. The young people have been designing ceramic and clay tiles based on these different themes and the  natural environment around and in the canal which  they identified  as being significant. The finished benches will be decorated with these individualised tiles and each groups bench will present a distinct story about that groups involvement  with the design and making of their tiles. This is a much-needed addition to local community safety and active travel on the canal  towpath which  will provide new bespoke seating for anybody who is walking, cycling or just wants to sit and ponder the natural environment around  them.

Easter Carmuirs Primary School Climate Change Project

The Primary 7 class from the school have been undertaking  a climate change project with great enthusiasm and positive commitment as part of their Dynamic Youth Award Programme. Last week the class took part in a Climate & Biodiversity Action Day at The Falkirk Wheel with the aim of tackling climate change. This was an empowering learning experience as we looked at our Carbon footprints, the environmental damage of plastics and glass, marvelled at the biodiversity in the canal and the excellent water quality, discussed active travel to and from school, two bags of rubbish were also cleared from the canal from canoes, and congratulations to everyone who received their Climate &  biodiversity Action Day Certificates for taking part and contributing to our  #communityclimateactionplan. The towpath and canal also received an extensive litter pick as part  of Keep Scotland Beautifull’s national  #upstreambattle campaign to address the issue of plastics polluting our seas by preventing them getting into our waterways in the first place. The Group also planted pollinators around the Ochiltree Ave access point to the  canal towpath so we can all look forward to  a riot of colour and biodiversity on the towpath this spring.     

Carmuirs Primary School : Dynamic Youth Award Group

This Group has been following an issue based and activity programme of Youth Action in the community on their journey to achieving a Dynamic Youth  Award. This has been a very diverse programme where we have covered outdoor learning ,nature therapy , survival skills, canal clear up, planting pollinators, cooking and a workshop on alcohol and substance use. This Group has excelled in the  outdoor learning environment where  their den building skills were notable as were  their skills with using tools and lighting fires with natural materials. A Group goes through many stages of development and this Group from being very tentative have evolved through an   experiential  learning  process to be a creative and resilient group with a host of skills and positive attributes.  

Easter Carmuirs Pocket Places Project

I was really pleased to attend the concluding session with the SUSTRANS pocket places team at Easter Carmuirs Primary School last week to get a  tour of the installations and new features which were designed with the school and community to improve safe access to the school and encourage greater levels of active travel to and from the  school. The new seating and planters are visually very impressive and provide  an excellent new social space for parents and carers to meet when dropping of and picking up the youngsters at the school. New layouts and fencing in the school campus better manage vehicular traffic in the playground and create a much safer route and space for active travel in and out of the school. The installation of an extensive new ramp and expanded pathways make a significant contribution to more inclusive  access around the school. I had originally got involved with this project back in the early  days of the Our Place Camelon and Tamfourhill Project and the development  of our local community safety strategy, it was therefore very rewarding to see this long-term project come to fruition.   

    

Twilight Sports in  the Easter School Holidays

After a very busy and high energy winter twilight sport sprgramme concluded at Easter Carmuirs Primary School on Friday 23rd February, I am happy to announce three twilight sports sessions for the Easter School holidays. We have been involving young volunteers with the Twilight sports and this is a feature we will build upon over the Easter holidays with young people receiving development training and the  opportunity to gain certificates in first aid, sports leadership and with food and hygiene. The programme over Easter will include football and rollerblading but there will also be opportunities to get involved with biodiversity and conservation activities in the park like tree planting and  some basic Bushcraft skills. As always food and drink will be provided and its all free for 10–16-year-olds, the programme is detailed below, please contact john@ttrohub.co.uk if you require any further information. (The full summer programme will return on Friday evenings in June)

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Fab Feb Youth Action Activities

In this month’s short blog, I am highlighting some great opportunities for local young people, 10-16 years old to get involved with creativity, community development, tackle climate change and learn some Bushcraft and Mindfulness skills in the Rough Castle Woods. The Programme is entirely free and food and drink will be provided at each session.

On Wednesday 7th February from 6.30pm-8.30pm in Tamfourhill Community Hub there will be an arts codesign workshop using ceramics and tiles. This is the first of two workshops, and the aim of the process is to design new benches for the Forth and Clyde Canal between Lock 16 and the Falkirk Wheel. It has been an ongoing concern the lack of seating at this section of the canal and the benches will be a really useful and valued  addition to the local community. There installation will encourage further active travel along the towpath and be a very useful resting area if you are cycling or walking or just wanting to have a mindful moment in the surroundings of the canal. The benches will become a great legacy of the creativity of local young people as this new seating will be a permanent feature for many years to come and will represent a heritage and cultural celebration of the local community.

On Friday 9th February we will be running a one-day  climate change project which will involve clearing and preparing an area of ground in the local woods for a wildflower meadow. The young people will be sowing pollinators which come the spring will produce a riot of colour in the woods thus attracting butterflies, bees and other pollinators which will all contribute to helping nature and addressing climate change. In the afternoon the group will be screen printing their own t-shirts with the theme of climate change and tackling the nature emergency. 

A 2-day programme is available on Monday 12th and Tuesday 13th February for learning Bushcraft and Survival Skills with an element of nature-based mindfulness. A few young people started this programme back in November last  year through the twilight sports programme  when we ran a session in the woods at Tamfourhill, however anybody can still join in and book onto the programme. A certificate of achievement will be awarded to  every young person who completes the programme. This will be happening at Rough Castle Woods and will be delivered through our ongoing partnership with the Well Wild – A Therapeutic approach to Forest schools and Bushcraft. This is a great opportunity to learn an array of life skills through the outdoors and  build up your knowledge and experience of survival  skills. 

I recommend booking onto these activities as there is a limit to the numbers that can Take part, you can do this at these links:

https://tamfourhill-gymnastics-club.classforkids.io/camp/12    

https://tamfourhill-gymnastics-club.classforkids.io/camp/13      

https://tamfourhill-gymnastics-club.classforkids.io/camp/14

I would also like to use this opportunity for  highlighting the excellent and ongoing work of the Youth Action in the Community Group from Carmuirs Primary School. The 6 young people have put in an outstanding effort on the towpath as part of the Keep Scotland Beautiful  #Upstreambattle litter pick and survey. This day also involved clearing ground and planting pollinators and was carried out in collaboration with Scottish Canals. The Group are all working towards their Dynamic Youth Awards and have also  been involved with Survival and Bushcraft skills, Pizza and fruit kebab making and are scheduled to be out clearing the canal again with a paddle pick up later this month. My congratulations to Carmuirs Primary school and gratitude to Scottish Canals and the Well Wild Project  for all working together to support and  deliver this local #YouthAction

And finally one of the members of our YAG has begun work on his Bronze Youth Achievement Award and here is some work he has done as  part of one of his targets for that Award which  involves Leo with taking photos and producing promotional  films for the Twilight Sports, Leo  explains: I edited the pictures and short clips that I took during twilight sports…./ this can be used to create promotional media for the local area and for the Falkirk Wheelers, I am using my skills for the benefit of other young people”   Leo Cierpikowski  (Youth Action Group)

https://1drv.ms/v/s!AhirdOD0wCFcvCyaeFzpl5bCKEol?e=7zPjQn

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Connecting with the outdoors in all seasons:

This  may not sound like a very seasonal topic to be highlighting in this the last Safer Communities Youth Action Blog for 2023, however our recent partnership with the Well Wild – A Therapeutic approach to Forest Schools and Bushcraft is proving to be an exciting and inspirational way of supporting both local youth action and our ongoing #ConnectingwiththeOutdoors programme. The nights may have got darker and the weather colder and wetter as we have moved through the autumn and into the winter, but these conditions can in fact add value to the quality of our outdoor experiences whilst continuing to facilitate positive mental wellbeing.

https://www.well-wild.co.uk/

After our successful summer programme 23 and our ongoing Connecting with the Outdoors programme where we have enjoyed a wide array of outdoor experiences, including: water-based activities on the canal in canoes and a fantastic cruise with the Seagull Trust, angling at different fisheries and locally at the Falkirk Wheel, archery, Bushcraft and survival skills out in the woods at Tamfourhill and Rough Castle. These sessions received very positive feedback from the members of the Recovery Community , local volunteers and the young people who had taken part over the summer. These outdoor activities are also underpinned by a therapeutic and mindfulness approach to being in the outdoors and this was reflected in our Mindfulness Monday Programme with the Forth Valley Recovery Community and supported by Scottish Canals. The positive value to our mental wellbeing through engaging with the  outdoors has been well documented and our Falkirk Communities Mental Health and Wellbeing funding from the Scottish Government is focussed upon these very attributes. The primary  aim is to better connect people with their community through them engaging with the natural assets and wild green places within Camelon and Tamfourhill. This process will facilitate improved mental and physical wellbeing and encourage greater community cohesion through connecting people with natural local places. The Project was also very much concerned with raising awareness of the benefits of being outdoors and how activities in nature can have a lasting positive impact upon your mental and physical wellbeing. A very successful  aspect  of our Connecting with the Outdoors Programme has been how it has enabled people to come together in groups to form supportive relationships and share learning and outdoor experiences and this aspect has been recognised and expressed by the members of the local Recovery Community and other local volunteers. The local Recovery Community will be undertaking a programme of four consecutive sessions with the Well Wild Project starting in  early January and I will regularly  highlight these sessions on our social media platforms in the New Year.

Having noted how positively local young people in particular were responding to outdoor learning and our previous successful John Muir Award Group and linked to our key outcome: Young People  will improve their mental and physical health and wellbeing, forming a partnership with the Well Wild Project based in the local Rough Castle Woods made absolute sense. That Project had also positively engaged a group of  local young people with an innovative programme of restorative justice in response to some acts of vandalism and with the support of our Local Community Police Officers we have begun a new collaborative approach to delivering outdoor learning through Bushcraft , survival skills and mindfulness . The Well Wild Safer Communities Outreach Programme will endeavour to connect with  young people who may be at risk of becoming involved with Anti-social behaviour and other community safety concerns through a programme of street-based outreach engagement, through our Twilight sports programme and through linking  with the local schools.  A key aspect of this collaboration with the Well Wild: A therapeutic approach to Bushcraft and forest schools, is to utilise that local facility and approach as a means for young people to build a wide array of social skills which will improve their resilience, self-esteem, confidence, problem solving skills and ability to adapt to challenging circumstances. The therapeutic underpinning of the outdoor learning aspect of this project will offer a unique opportunity for some local young people to tackle personal issues and better equip them to deal with challenges that they may be facing at home, in the community and at work or in education.

The accreditation aspect which can be  provided through the SCYAP will facilitate an important method of enabling young people to acknowledge their own learning and achievements and this is well aligned to another of our key outcomes; Young people will increase their social skills, confidence and levels of attainment.  The new year will bring in several new Youth Action  Groups who will directly benefit form this new local partnership and work has just begun with a group of  P7  young people at Carmuirs Primary School. Potentially there are three additional groups from Easter Carmuirs Primary School a group from Falkirk High School and the continuation of our community-based youth groups one of whom took part in an introduction session in the Tamfourhill woods a couple of weeks ago.

And to finish with the outdoors theme the Scouting movement are keen to start activities in Camelon, Tamfourhill & Bantaskin, I am sure there would be lots of local young people interested in getting involved , however volunteer leaders would be required to get this established in the area.

I  recently met with  representatives of local scouting. They are trying to see if there is any demand for scouting locally. They are looking at the possibility of starting scouting in the area for the 4-14 age groups and potentially also older age groups. They are particularly interested at this stage if any adults over the age of 18 who might be interested in getting involved as leaders in the initiative

Please get in touch with John@ttrohub.co.uk or on 07391524528 or contact Falkirk District Scouts directly at: development@falkirkscouts.org.uk 

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Winter Twilight Sports Programme dates confirmed, Mindfulness Benches installed into local park and Development Plan for Youth Action Project published.

Twilight Sports returns for the winter programme 2023-24

The first block of the winter twilight sports programme will take place from Friday 10th November until Friday 15th December from 6pm-8pm in Tamfourhill Community Hub, the programme is open to all 10–16-year-olds and is entirely free. The weekly Programme will be split between Fun football provided by the fantastic Warriors in the Community and Rollerblading run by the fabulous Falkirk Wheelers, all equipment is provided and there will be a snack and drink for everyone who comes along. The Twilight sports will continue to work closely with our local community Police Officers and the Fire and Rescue Service who will be making regular visits to the Twilight sports sessions to get to know the young people and promote positive community Safety messages. The programme will run indoors until March 2024 and the intention is to move to Easter Carmuirs after the Christmas and New Year holidays and we will publish the dates and venue ASAP.

Mindfulness and Sensory Benches installed in local park:

Two of the key activities for the local area that were identified by the Youth Action Group through their summer programme arts project were: (1) Arts Projects to improve the appearance and quality of the local area, and (2) Developing community green spaces and parks through new facilities, opportunities and environmental improvements. The Youth Action Group have responded to these priorities through their very recent design and installation of the mindfulness and sensory benches within the public park on Carradale Avenue in Tamfourhill.  The Benches will provide a chill out and relaxed location for anybody to just sit and enjoy the green space around them. The experience will be enhanced through the different sensory plants by smell and taste that the Group have planted into the benches, The Group had spent time during the summer programme considering what they felt were the best values that they wanted their group and the wider community to aspire too.   These values and statements reflect the Groups aspirations for improving their community and some of these values are detailed through the painted designs on the benches and these include; Mindful, Calmness, Kinder, Inclusive, Aware, Diverse and Respect. We would like to thank Link Housing Association (https://www.linkhousing.org.uk/) who provided the funding for these benches through their new Community Fund and the professionalism and commitment of our Community Artist Sarah Diver.     

Many photos taken by Alba Coventry as part of her Target for the Groups Dynamic Youth Award

Safer Communities Youth Action Project (SCYAP) Strategic Plan 2023-26:

In confirming strategic outcomes and a Development Plan for the SCYAP it is critically important that local young people’s views, opinions and aspirations are at the centre of that plan and that they are also fully aligned to the relevant National Youth work Outcomes and the expectations of the Project’s main funders. The Safer Communities Youth Action Project is itself a legacy of the local Community Safety Strategy:  Camelon and Tamfourhill will be a safer, happier and more attractive place to live, therefore a number of those key outcomes remain very much relevant and ongoing. The types of activities and programmes that will be developed will always be young person led, involve the wider community and will be an empowering and learning process for the participating young people. The published Development Plans proposed youth activities also strongly reflect the types of activities that young people themselves expressed as strong preferences through the work led by our Youth Action Group over the summer of 2023, namely: Arts Projects, Improving outdoor spaces, Sports & Games, Campaigning and learning new skills through training and recognised accreditations.

Here is a pictorial representation of the 5 strategic outcomes for the SCYAP:

Young People will have better connections with the wider Community

Young people will improve their mental and physical health and wellbeing

Young people will have increased opportunities to take part in activities that address community safety and reduce their risk taking

Young people will increase their social skills, confidence to learn and levels of attainment

t

 Young people will grow as active citizens, expressing their voice and enabling change

Underpinning these outcomes and proposed areas of youth action will be the values that have been identified over our Summer Programme 23 and these should be reflected in all the work developed and delivered by the SCYAP and in terms of the work undertaken with the wider community:

The Community will therefore be improved through making it Safer, More Positive, Greener, Mindful, Calmer, More Respectful, Creative, Expressive, Inclusive, Aware and Diverse.

Documents for reference:

SCYAP Key Outcomes and Development Plan (Full document)

Camelon and Tamfourhill will be a safer, happier and more attractive place to live

Young People and Community Safety in Camelon and Tamfourhill

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Launching the Safer Communities Youth Action Project

Review of the Summer Programme 2023

Staff, volunteers and young people who all took part in #SummerProgramme23

#YouthAction  #Summerprogramme23

Rather than arrange a high-profile launch for our new local Youth Project we believed it would be more effective to get young people involved from the outset and use the summer school holidays as an opportunity to have young people immediately participating. The Summer Programme 23 provided an array of outdoor learning activities, sports, creativity, accredited learning opportunities, and community development projects and this was delivered with the view to involving young people directly with the planning of the Youth Action Projects longer term aims and priorities.

  • The Youth Action Group and Community Arts Project:

An important outcome from the Summer Programme has been the formation of the Youth Action Group who had initially got involved through the Summer Programmes community arts project and who were also undertaking their Dynamic Youth Awards as part of that project. This was ostensibly an arts project which was concerned with creativity and enabling young people to design logos and images for banners and publicity materials for the new youth project, but it was built around a strong commitment to youth empowerment and where peer consultation was utilised to ensure that the confirmed priorities for future local youth action were relevant and meaningful. The process and workshops were initially focused upon young people identifying what they felt were local community assets  and similarly encouraged them to identify areas and locations they felt required improvement and development. Underpinning this approach was a commitment to empowerment and giving young people a greater voice in the community and a means for them to take collective action to bring about positive change for themselves and the wider community. The group  consulted their peers at the twilight sports, fun in the park sessions and at the Tamfourhill community fun day and encouraged young people to take part in the consultation through t-shirt making and supporting them to vote on their priorities through using designed themed badges and ballot boxes. This enabled the Youth Action Group to confirm five key themes which they believed were the most important for future local youth action, would be relevant and meaningful and would best reflect young people’s aspirations for their local community.

The Five Agreed Themes that will form the basis of the Projects work and activities over the next three years are:  

  1. Arts Projects to improve the appearance and quality of the local area.   
  2. Developing community green spaces and parks through new facilities, opportunities and environmental improvements.
  3. Sports and Games, building on the success of the Twilight Sports Programme.
  4. Campaigning on youth issues and having an effective voice within the local community and beyond.
  5. Skills and Training through nationally recognised accreditation opportunities and gaining certificates and awards.

There will be a wide array of opportunities for local young people to now be involved with these activities and projects and the intention will be to take this forward in partnership with local groups and organisations along with our partners from other voluntary agencies, statutory services, and Falkirk Council. The Youth Action Group themselves will be working on a number of local  improvement projects over the next few months which will put young people and their aspirations  right at the centre  of local community developments.  

  • The Junior Sports Leadership Award and Community Capacity Building:

This programme was delivered as a Dynamic Youth Award and was designed to provide an opportunity for some of the young people who regularly attended the Twilight Sport programme on a Friday evening to develop their leadership, organisation, and communication skills, facilitate confidence building and to focus that process on their interest in sport. An important aspect of the Twilight sports is to build local capacity and therefore to embed the programme in the longer term. This will require building the capacity of local people to become qualified coaches and skilled instructors who can deliver the programme locally and this award represents the first rung on that development ladder.  We are absolutely delighted to announce that we now have 6 junior sports leaders who it is hoped will now be further involved in a peer leadership role at the winter twilight sports programme when it gets underway in November.  

  • Summer activities and Learning Programmes:

The summer programme provided a wide range of fun sports and nature activities in local parks along with some more challenging outdoor learning activities like days in canoes on the canal, a visit to a trout fishery in Balmule in Fife, bike maintenance classes and sessions which focussed upon mindfulness, environmental clean ups and survival skills in the woods. Young people could undertake accreditation through the Dynamic Youth Awards that were offered as part of the Community Arts Project and the Junior Sports leadership Award and Saltire volunteering certificates will be issued to those young people who took part in the environmental clean ups and paddle pick-ups on the canoes.  

93 young people completed session evaluation forms over the 6 weeks of the programme, and here are some of the key findings from that feedback:

  • 88% really enjoyed the activity session they attended

What did young people learn that surprised them:

What would they remember about the activity?

Qu (5) How much do you feel that you have learnt today about teamwork and or working in a group? (Score between 1 for you never learnt anything to 10 Yes, I learnt a lot about teamwork today)

85 responses to this question were returned with an average score of 8.4

Qu (6) How much do you feel that you personally have used different skills like decision making & problem solving at today’s activity session? (Score between 1 if you felt you used no skills and 10 Yes, I used loads of these skills today)

82 responses to this question were returned with an average score of 8.4

Here is a breakdown of the ages and genders of the young people who took part over the programme:

AGEMALEFEMALENON-BINARYNUMBERS
 12 years and under28 (21%)65 (48%)5 (4%)98 (72.6%)
13-15 years old21 (16%)16 (12%)037 (27.4%)
TOTAL49 (36%)81 (60%)5 (4%)135
Breakdown of participating young people by age and gender.

14 Dynamic Youth Awards were successfully achieved, 1 High 5 Award and 8 Saltire Volunteering certificates will be issued.

I would like to acknowledge and thank the following individuals and organisations who supported, delivered and contributed to a magnificent #SummerProgramme23 of #YouthAction.

John Wells at the Well Wild- A therapeutic approach to Forest school and Bushcraft

Sarah Diver: Community artist who worked with the Youth Action Groups Community art project

Martin Wylie Community Sports Hub Officer at Falkirk Council for delivering activities for the junior Sports Leadership Award

Gregor Watson at the Falkirk Wheelers for the rollerblading at the summer fun in the park sessions.

TCV and Laura Hindle

Scottish Canals for canoeing

Balmule Fishery

Ginger our mini bus driver

TTRO: All the committee for their positive encouragement and volunteering

TCH: Use of the Hall , Hub , kitchen and lots of support

Falkirk Council and the school food and activity funding

Ryan Flaherty at Forth Environment Link for bike maintenance drop-ins & Dr Bike

Next month’s blog will feature a review of the #Connectingwiththeoutdoors programme, the  Youth Action groups Mindfulness and sensory benches project which is scheduled for a local park in Tamfourhill and news and details about the Twilight Sports Indoors winter programme.  

The Safer Communities Youth Action Project supports young people to have an effective voice and take #YouthAction:

Save our No 6 Bus !
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Youth Action in Camelon and Tamfourhill for Summer 2023:

The forthcoming summer school holidays provide an excellent opportunity to launch the new Safer Streets Youth Action Project (SSYAP). Since the Project began in April, we have been supporting the Friday night Twilight Sports Programme which has had a fantastic series of sessions at Easter Carmuirs park and in the last couple of weeks has moved to Nailer Road Park. This open approach to providing young people with sports activities in public parks will be extended over the summer holidays with additional Monday afternoon sessions taking place in 4 local parks. The Project is fortunate in having recently employed our new Youth Outreach Worker Rachael Hardy who joined the team in early May, and she has been settling into her new role and enjoying the opportunity to meet some local young people, community volunteers and the partners we will be working with over the next three years. Here is Rachael helping put on a Climate Action Plan litter pick.

The Summer Programme 2023 has a community safety and youth action theme, and this will be reflected in an exciting programme of outdoor learning, activity-based opportunities, bike maintenance and a community arts project. We will provide an additional opportunity for local young people to use these experiences to gain nationally recognised accreditations like the Saltire volunteering award, and the High 5 and Dynamic Youth Awards. The Summer Programme has been funded by Falkirk Council School Holiday fund and will involve a range of delivery partners, including: The Falkirk Wheelers, Well Wild, Scottish Canals, Camelon Sports Hub, Forth Environment Link and will also be connected to local community groups and organisations. The Community arts project will be led by an experienced community artist, and this will involve young people exploring their community for its positive assets and potential improvements along with peer consultation events. We are using this summer engagement to get to know the young people better, build good positive relationships with them and most importantly listen to their views, opinions and aspirations about their community.  The full programme is below and many of the activities and projects have limited places so pre booking is essential and we will be operating a first come first served system, and to book a young person onto these activities please go to this link:

https://tamfourhill-gymnastics-club.class4kids.co.uk/

please also speak to myself if you want to chat about any matters concerning the  actual programme; john@ttrohub.co.uk

The Open Doors Safer Streets event is taking place on Friday 23rd June form 11am-2pm in the Forth Valley Sensory Centre and the theme is tackling poverty and especially within the context of the current cost of living crises. The Councils Debt Advice Team will be present who can help you to manage your money and if you are worried about debt or are struggling to manage your money, they can help. The Debt Advice Team can give you help and advice on all types of debt including rent and mortgage arrears, council tax, personal loans, hire purchase agreements, credit cards, store cards, payday loans, catalogues and fuel bills. They will attend this Event, and they will provide free advice which is confidential and impartial and is available to anyone who lives or works in the Falkirk Council area. There will also be welfare advice available and that will include support with issues of claiming the right benefits, and they can provide support with getting you relevant training and potential employment. The other partners at the event will include Community Police, Fire and Rescue Service, Forth Valley Recovery Community, Transform drugs agency, The Sensory Centre, Forth environment Link with Dr Bike, Falkirk Council and providing confidential advice and support will be the Central Scotland Regional Equality Council. It will also be a great opportunity for our new Youth Action Project to be introduced to this wide array of organisations and services and to highlight the summer school holiday programme, so please pop in for a visit and hear what’s happening locally and perhaps make some suggestions which can contribute positively to improved community involvement and action.

An important aspect of the local community safety strategy was the production of a Community Climate Action Plan and I have continued to support and develop this area of work. The Core Group who steers the Plan forward met recently and it was great to hear how much work is going on locally to combat climate change and support environmental improvements and our contribution to Net Zero. I have been working with the Tamfourhill Community Hub committee to look at retrofitting the building with improved energy efficiency technology. We are currently examining funding options through the Scottish Government’s Community Renewables Energy Scheme or for short the CARES programme in order to install heat pumps, solar panels and a new heating system which would create a sustainable net zero community hub, so watch this space over the next year. The Climate action plan also facilitates fun activities, and it was an enjoyable day back in May when we supported a group of Community Champions from Falkirk High School take part in a canal clear up and Action for Net Zero workshop. The young people from Falkirk High School with the support of their teacher are very active and vocal members of the Climate Action Plan Core Group and now with our local youth project fully active we will look to build and expand local young people’s role within the Core Group and with Net Zero and climate change activities around Camelon and Tamfourhill.  

community

New Youth Action Project to be launched for Tamfourhill, Camelon and Bantaskin.

The Safer Streets Youth Action Project is to be fully launched in the coming weeks with the overarching aim of working with young people across Tamfourhill, Camelon and Bantaskin to encourage youth led community action. This exciting new Project will build upon the ongoing success of the local Community Safety work that was initiated by Our Place Camelon & Tamfourhill. This new youth outreach project will support and connect with the weekly Twilight Sports Programme which operates on Friday nights at different public parks in Camelon and Tamfourhill and will also engage with young people at other appropriate times and locations throughout these neighbourhoods. This new programme of youth engagement, empowerment and action has been funded until spring 2026 by the National lottery Community Fund Young Start Programme along with a grant awarded from the Falkirk Community Schools Fund. The Project will be managed by the Tamfourhill Tenants and Residents Organisation who will deploy youth work staff to develop and support these new programmes of youth led activities. The Project will take a partnership approach and that will involve other local groups and organisations along with statutory services like the Police and Fire and Rescue Service. The focus of the Project will be to work alongside young people in a way that is both empowering and is responsive to their aspirations, concerns and interests.

John R Hosie the Development worker explained:  This new Project will have a significant impact upon the local community: facilitating new opportunities for young people that will improve their health and mental wellbeing and encourage their participation and involvement with the wider community. This will be a young person led Project that will invest in their aspirations and abilities and involve them with the development of the wider community. Partnership is a key theme, and the intention is to work closely with existing local groups and other organisations so that we can support and develop a programme of activities which are embedded in the wider priorities of the local community. The Youth Action Project has evolved through the local community safety strategy, and this is reflected in the establishment of existing activities like the Friday night Twilight Sports Programme. This approach will be fundamental to working with young people as we support them to establish other relevant community projects and activities that are empowering, enhance learning through national award schemes and all contributing to improved community safety. This is a significant investment by the National lottery Young Start Programme along with the Falkirk Community Schools Fund which will enable positive Youth Action in Tamfourhill, Camelon and Bantaskin, initially over the next three years.

The coming weeks will be focused upon engaging and actively listening to young people and meeting with other key stakeholders. The Twilight sports programme is up and running and the full programme over the spring and summer 2023 is detailed above. The Plans for the summer will involve additional activities taking place in local parks with the opportunity for young people to be involved with accredited youth work programmes in July and August. A visioning and planning session will also take place at the end of June where the community, young people and partners will agree outcomes and a plan of action for the following 3 years.      

If you would like further details about the Safer Streets Youth Action Project: please contact John R Hosie at john@ttrohub.co.uk or on 07391524528 or visit our social media platforms: 

https://www.facebook.com/Saferstreetsyouthactionproject



community

Safer Streets Youth Action Project:

The new Project will work with young people across Tamfourhill, Camelon and Bantaskin to encourage youth led community action in the area.

The Our Place Camelon and Tamfourhill Project comes to an end on the 5th May 2023, however the Tamfourhill Tenants and Residents Organisation are very happy and excited to be launching the new #SaferStreetsYouthActionProject. This Project has been developed directly from the community safety work that has taken place through the Our Place Project. The SSYAP aims to work with young people across Tamfourhill, Camelon and Bantaskin to encourage youth led community action throughout the area. The SSYAP will reflect the aspirations and interests of local young people and will continue to be aligned to the local communities priorities. We will in the short term continue to support ongoing areas of community safety work as I detailed in the community safety blog for March 2023:

https://opcamelontamfourhill.co.uk/2023/03/07/a-time-to-review-and-confirm-our-goals-the-community-safety-bulletin-for-march-2023/

These specific areas of community safety work will remain relevant but will become refocused as our attentions are more concentrated on delivering a successful new youth project over the next three years. The SSYAP has been funded until spring 2026 by the National lottery Community Fund Young Start Programme along with the Falkirk Community Schools Fund.

On a personal level I am enthused and very pleased to have been given the opportunity to take this new Youth Action Project forward especially as it is aligned to many aspects of the community safety strategy and the work I was so closely involved with through the Our Place Project. I fully intend to continue with a regular blog and I am expect local young people to be making regular contributions to that blog, the aspiration is that over time that young people will have the autonomy and confidence to be publishing their own materials in accordance with their own local priorities, issues and interests.

The current Our Place Camelon and Tamfourhill website will now become redundant , however the work of the Youth Project and other relevant community safety matters will now appear at: https://saferstreetsyouthaction.co.uk/ website, my new email address is: john@ttrohub.co.uk, Twitter is: @SaferstreetsYP and the revamped Facebook page is http://www.facebook.com/Saferstreetsyouthactionproject. My phone number remains 07391524528.

As this is the very last community safety blog , I thought I would be indulgent and look back at some of the photographic highlights of the community safety aspect of the Our Place Project 2020-23. Thanks and Kind Regards John R Hosie.

community

Podcast featuring the Community Climate Action Plan for Camelon and Tamfourhill and news of local environmental activities in April.

I would like to begin this months blog in a unique way by providing the link to a recent podcast which was broadcast by the Scottish Community Climate Action Networks 1000 Better Stories Series which was focused upon the Community Climate Action Plan (CCAP) for Camelon and Tamfourhill. Please have a listen as the community safety engager along with Maya, Olivia and Ms Stroud from Falkirk High School chat about their experiences of creating our CCAP.

1000 Better Stories : The Story of the Camelon and Tamfourhill Community Climate Action Plan

At the CCAP Core Group meeting on the 27th March it was agreed to implement the following aspects of the plan for this spring:

Develop the raised beds at Tamfourhill Community Hub and adjacent community woodland and support other local community growing projects.

Organise the planting of trees, including fruit trees at different locations of the community and supported by Tidy, Clean & Green, Our Place and the Forth Valley Sensory Centre.

To work with the Forth Environment Link to deliver additional food and cooking workshops and also in partnership with Forth Environment link establish a new bike maintenance Hub which will train up local people and potentially start a local bike library.

Organise a canal clear up and conservation day for pupils from Falkirk High School.

Support Tamfourhill Community Hub with their energy efficiency audit and explore options for installing a sustainable and non carbon based heating system.

Support local volunteers who are setting up a Rubbish uplift and collection service for the local area.

Work with local groups and organisations to confirm regular monthly community litter picks targeted at key locations.

SPRING CLEAN UP 2023

And finally I would like to highlight this fantastic community event which is scheduled for this Saturday 8th April being organised by Tidy, Clean and Green in partnership with Go Forth and Clyde as part of the Keep Scotland Beautiful Spring Clean 2023. Please go along if you can the details are below or contact tidycleangreen@gmail.com

community

Canal Connections Public Report:

The Falkirk Canal Connections project ended at the end of September 2022. A collaborative regeneration project that ran from January to September, its aim was to create a brighter, fairer and greener future for Falkirk’s canal-side communities. Funded by the UK Government’s UK Community Renewal Fund, it focused on the areas of Camelon and Tamfourhill.

The ambitious project brought together 10 partners to work together on 18 different initiatives. The programme had an incredible scope of works, covering some of the most iconic sites in central Scotland. These included the Falkirk Wheel, the Kelpies and the communities that live between them. The ’Foundations for a Brighter Future’ report shows what was achieved by each of the different initiatives that took place under four key themes: