community

A Celebration of the Forth Valley Recovery Communities new partnership with the Our Place Project and #tidycleangreen

I was absolutely delighted to attend todays celebratory launch of the Tamfourhill Recovery Drop-in and its new environmental programme. This initiative has evolved through the local community safety strategy and is also intrinsically linked with our Tidy, Clean and Green campaign. Tamfourhill Community Hub provided a top quality buffet and I would like to thank Louise for providing the catering and everyone at Tamfourhill Community Hub for welcoming both the guests and the members of the Recovery Community. Narek Bido the Chief Executive of Addictions Support Counselling was on hand to answer any questions about his organisation and Stephen Feighan a Recovery Development Support Worker who has been working specifically with establishing the environmental programme was able to highlight the different aspects of the programme and its implementation in the local area. Tracy Fullerton from the NHS Forth valley Health and Social Care Partnership was focused upon her work of creating an informative film and documentary about the unique approach that is being developed at Tamfourhill and highlighting how this community engagement approach with its environmental underpinning will be able to facilitate positive recovery through embracing the mental and physical wellbeing of working in the outdoors. This approach can certainly be replicated and in that respect local representatives from the Denny Community were in attendance to consider how a similar approach to supporting community and environmental based recovery provisions can be developed for their community.

Establishing this new programme from Tamfourhill is very much consistent with several of the key outcomes of the community safety strategy and is also well aligned with the ethos and priorities of the Community Hub. The FVRC have already carried our several litter picks and this has been acknowledged and applauded by the local community , this has been noticed and already they have made a positive difference and improvement to several open spaces and streets in the community. This is an initial activity and along with the groups regular rambles and guided walks they will slowly but surely expand their environmental activities. They are scheduled to take part in a canal clear up later in the month and there are several potential opportunities’ to develop local conservation projects and link these to accreditations and a variety of community learning programmes. The community safety strategy has highlighted the need for greater community cohesion and this programme is an excellent example of how disparate or often stigmatised groups can come and work together and contribute to the development of their local community and facilitate mutual respect and learning through that process.

An enjoyable launch day could not be dampened through watching Scotland’s opening match in the Euro finals, it was despite the result good to share some footballing memories and realise how shared community and mutual support can facilitate positive outcomes and help us overcome difficult challenges.

The Drop-in and environmental programme will run every Monday from 10am at Tamfourhill Community Hub , you can find more information through either contacting myself at communitysafetyengager@tamfourhilltro.co.uk or emailing directly to enquiries@asc.me.uk you will always be made very welcome by popping into the Hub on and Monday. Further information about Forth Valley Recovery Community (FVRC) | ASC

community

A big thank you to the young citizens of Camelon and Tamfourhill

Primary 7 pupils from Carmuirs Primary School

This week’s community safety blog is dedicated to our young volunteers and citizens of Camelon and Tamfourhill. A big thank you to the group of young canal clear up volunteers who spent Wednesday 19th May on the canal removing a wide array of rubbish and mess form the waterway.  The Group also spent time in a learning workshop where the problems associated with plastic pollution were highlighted. The Group then considered ways which they as individuals, the local community and businesses and how local and national governments could contribute to reducing the harm being caused through single use plastics. A certificate of achievement is on its way to the pupils to acknowledge their positive contributions to keeping the canal #tidycleangreen and off course the new canoeing skills which they learnt through the instruction they received from Mathew Skilling of Scottish Canals. A big round of applause to: Zach, Cody, Owen, Catherine, Aiden and Scott  and supported and encouraged by their class room assistant Scott. I would also like to thank Russell and Carol form Scottish Canals for their support and encouragement to the day’s activities.

Friday 21st May was a day of 2 halves, the first half took place at Brown Street Park where the Primary 3 class from Carmuirs Primary school cleared the park of its considerable litter and mess and also took part in the veg your ledge workshop facilitated by Forth Environment Link.  My colleague Dan is supporting a new community growing project form this park and its heartening to see it now being transformed form a vacant empty space into a new community resource. This was the first stage in this conversion and the youngsters carried out a Keep Scotland Beautiful Eco schools litter survey.  

The pupils were helped to plant their own boxes and they took the 9 boxes back to their class to watch their vegetables grow, hopefully some lettuces will be ready for picking before the end of the school’s summer term. I am sure Dan will be welcoming them and their peers back in the new term to work on some of the community growing activities which will be getting developed from the Park. We received a visit from our two local community police officer’s PC Hill and Muir who came and joined in with the morning’s activities and also a thankyou to the adult volunteers of Chris, Gordon and Nicholla who assisted with the litter pick.  

The second half kicked off at 2pm in the car park at Camelon Juniors Football Club. This activity was called All Games Allowed, and this title was to contrast the usual no games allowed signs that we see far too often throughout our local communities. The aim was to look at how the Primary 3 pupils might make use of the space for safe paly and to encourage them to invent their own games based on the traditional street and pavement games that go back generations. We started with Mark form Camelon Arts inviting us all to try an ancient Viking game called:  Kubb and  this was great fun, extremely competitive, it involved knocking out skittles and eventually the game would be won through somebody  knocking out the king  which happened on several occasions.

A game of Kubb

Primary 3 came up with their own chalked out assault course which involved different challenges as you worked your wat through the chalked-out course on the ground. The class were divided into teams of three and were timed as they worked their way through all the different tasks and skills they were instructed to undertake. The game finished with a slow-motion crab race where the winner was the person who managed to go so slowly that they were last, congratulations to Ms Paterson the class teacher who won this race by a few pincers.  I would intend to include some sort of street games and safe play areas for local children as we go forward with the community safety strategy and the session at the Juniors Car Park was extremely helpful with illustrating how existing community spaces could be better used and adapted for wider community benefit. Thanks to Mark form the Camelon Arts Project for his comparing of these street games, I enjoyed this session very much and again Primary3 pupils were a credit to their school and their local community.

community

An Invitation to come along to the Juniors Car Park

Could we have a safe play street in Camelon and Tamfourhill ?

You are cordially invited to make a site visit to the Camelon Juniors Car park Area and to imagine this space as being safer, more enjoyable and for the benefit of the local community: This location has a long-standing negative reputation for anti-social behaviour and is somewhere that is often described as being unsafe. We therefore want to hear about your ideas and opinions as to how this space could be positively transformed for the benefit of the community.

Friday 21st May I will be on site with colleagues from Camelon Arts and other partners to ask local people and pupils from Carmuirs Primary school some key questions:

•             What could be done to make this location safer?

•             How could you make the green spaces more appealing?

•             What would make you come here and spend more time in this area?

•             What needs to be provided here to encourage people to make use of the area?

The site visit is being split into 3 sections:

  • 2pm -3pm: This section is called “all games allowed” and we will be welcoming the Primary 3 class from Carmuirs Primary school to take part in an ancient Viking game and then we will ask the class to split up and invent their own group games. These games could become part of the new landscape of that location, and we can consider if the car park could become a Play area at certain times of the week or day or during school holidays.
  • 3pm -4pm: This section is for adult community members. Local tenants and member of local community groups, and this is where the above questions will be used as prompts for wider discussions targeted at 5 key spaces that we have identified from within the wider car park area. These are illustrated in the photographs
  • 4pm -5pm: This section is targeted at young people and local youth workers and the process and questions used will be the same however this will be facilitated from a young person’s perspective and with an emphasis upon their safety within the community and developing these spaces responsibly for the benefit of themselves and the wider community.

The community safety strategy first key outcome states that: The Community will have greater capacity to address the negative impacts of Anti-Social Behaviour. The approach will be to utilise, support and develop the skills and assets that already exist within Camelon and Tamfourhill and to do this in a  way that facilitates solutions and positive outcomes to current local community safety priorities.

The afternoon sessions will be risk assessed and COVID compliant and we will be very happy for people to take part but in order to assist with our COVID management of the site could you please get in touch with myself to confirm  that you plan to come along.

John R Hosie communitysafetyengager@tamfourhilltro.co.uk mob 07391524528 or leave a message on the website as detailed below

community

 Forth Valley Recovery Community and the local Community Safety Strategy:

 

A key outcome of the local Community safety strategy is: There will be an increase in the provision of recovery and support opportunities for individuals and families who have been impacted by substance use and the criminal justice system and intricately linked are the outcomes concerned with improving community cohesion and lowering the level of local anxiety that exists in relation to substance use.  This Strategy most importantly is a framework for community action and agency collaboration and there are proposed projects and various programmes of activities that should enable the community and its partners to successfully work towards achieving these agreed outcomes.

The period of community consultation and survey work had highlighted a considerable level of local concerns about substance use and a range of associated negative behaviours, criminal activity, and anti-social behaviour. This then was going to present a particularly challenging community safety priority, but I was reassured that a positive path could be navigated through some of my early involvement with the proposed Creative Communities Project which was intending to adopt a Look Behind the Labels approach.  Although this inter agency collaboration bid to Inspiring Scotland was unsuccessful, the dialogue and thinking involved in working up the bid provided a strong indication as to how a local community-based and empathetic approach to working with individuals and families involved with problematic substance use might be the most effective way to move forward. This ethos and approach has enabled an important partnership to develop within the last few months with Addictions, Support Counselling: Forth Valley Recovery Community (FVRC) where the Our Place Project has been able to facilitate a community-based approach to providing local activities and opportunities for members of that Recovery Community. This has been welcomed by the FVRC and the wider community have acknowledged their increased positive visibility and their valued contribution to the wider wellbeing and improvement of the local community. This has been especially noted as the FVRC have recently been involved in local community clear ups and three massively successful litter picks and are now regular participants with the #tidycleangreen campaign.

In my initial meetings with local drugs agencies and through some peer interviews conducted by FVRC I was made acutely aware of some of the social challenges that confront individuals who are ready or are beginning to approach their recovery journey. I was provided with a number of testimonials form local people and clearly the need for support and positive reinforcement from the local community are critically important factors in any local person’s start of a recovery lifestyle.  I have been impressed with how FVRC are providing strong role models through involving individuals with lived experience within their local community and how that can illustrate and provide hope for others and facilitate a realisation that there are community-based support structures in place so that you can make that first step to getting better. This approach is a means that enables individuals to reengage with their local community without being permanently stigmatised and marginalised from the people and support networks which can be nurtured and developed around them.

The notion of visibility is a core part of this particular community safety partnership and we are therefore incredibly happy to announce that we will be launching a Forth Valley Recovery Drop-in session every Monday and operating out of Tamfourhill Community Hub. This drop-in will provide a plethora of support services and activities for its members and it will similarly be welcoming to family and friends of individuals who are dealing with or moving into recovery from substance dependency. This new drop-in provision meets the key outcomes as described in the introduction of this article and it is the beginning of a community development process that I will be supporting in an ongoing basis. There is an environmental programme attached to this drop-in so expect to see further regular litter picks carried out by members of the recovery community, participation in the canal clear up programme, rambles round the scenic spots of Camelon and Tamfourhill and in the longer term some conservation projects. The drop-in provision is scheduled to open towards the end of this month and there will be a launch event where other partners and guests will be cordially invited to attend. For further information about FVRC please go to this link:   

community

Launch of the Community Safety Strategy for Camelon and Tamfourhill

The Strategy document is the start of a community engagement process

The first anniversary celebration of the Our Place Camelon and Tamfourhill Project was a great success, there was positivity , enthusiasm and good news and virtual celebration about the first year of the Projects work in the community. There will be recordings of the evenings highlights available soon so keep an eye out on our social media if you want to catch up with the presentations and different inputs as we reflected back on a bizarre year, showcased our successes and looked forward to what was planned ahead. The evening provided an ideal platform for myself to launch the new community safety strategy for Camelon and Tamfourhill.

Presenting the community safety strategy at OPCT first anniversary celebration

Although the local strategy and priorities are a community led plan and they represent the voice of local people, I also have to acknowledge the wider national context that we operate within and be aware of the central driving forces and priorities of the main partners that we will be working with in the coming months. Falkirk Council: The Falkirk Plan, Locality Plans and strategic property reviews, community planning partnership, criminal justice system, Scottish Government social policy & economic development, emerging drugs policies and a movement away from a punitive approach through criminalisation and the courts towards regulation, harm reduction and health focussed approaches. This is the context the local strategy sits within and these are some of the wider agendas that most align with our own local activities.

In a recent blog I discussed the Scottish Community Safety Networks election manifesto for 2021 and in particular I emphasised this section: The SCSN believes that communities will be safer if there is more involvement of people in communities in the planning, delivery, and development of the services that they use, they go onto stress the fundamental importance of youth work and Community Learning & Development and an emphasise upon working together through creating local partnerships which keep communities safe. This then will be the guiding principle of our local community safety strategy, it will promote community development and capacity building facilitating the local ownership and delivery of new projects and initiatives, especially with young people and the development of new local youth work opportunities. There is the assertion within the manifesto that there must be more involvement of people in communities in the planning, delivery and development of services that they use, or often what is referred to as co-production. This ethos has been taken forward on confirming the local community safety strategy.

The local methodology and process of consultation, included: the community identifying its local priorities and the areas that were felt to require action, activity, and development. The process deployed included: surveys, 1-1 interviews, focus groups, meeting stakeholders and partners. 

We have 12 key outcomes , and a raft of activities and plans that will enable us to reach these outcomes successfully, it is dependent on agencies contributing to that process and buying into this strategy , some activities, actions and Projects will meet several of the outcomes, however the indicators or contributions of these activities will be measured with different criteria and we will look at different indicators derived from the activity depending upon the key outcome, so working with young people in the community will contribute to the key outcome around ASB but it will also make a significant contributions to other key outcomes like the improvement to our open green spaces , the strategy is therefore cross fertilised and interconnected where activities and community projects will be serving to meet several key outcomes concurrently.

The full strategy document is now available , so please get in touch with myself if you require a copy : communitysafetyengager@tamfourhilltro.co.uk or Mob: 07391524548, here is a summary of the 12 key outcomes of the strategy:

The overarching aim:

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

The Community will have greater capacity to address the negative impacts of ASB.
Young people will have increased opportunities to have their voices heard about the issues that affect their safety within the community
There will be an increase in the number of Young people involved with projects and activities that address community safety and reduce risk taking.
There will be an increase in the provision of recovery and support opportunities for individuals and families who have been impacted by substance use and the criminal justice system. 
There will be improved Community cohesion.
The level of community anxiety about local substance use will be reduced.
Local people will have greater confidence in the agencies that deliver relevant community safety services.  
There will be improved partnership working and greater collaboration between the community and agencies.
The quality of the local green environment and open public spaces will improve through a reduction in the quantity of littering, fly-tipping, and dog waste.
Public spaces and the green environment will have an increase in the amount and diversity of use by local groups and individuals.
There will be greater road safety with an increase in the level of Active Travel.
The community will have an improved sense of security and reassurance about their homes, property, and assets.
A future community development opportunity

community

Plastic is suffocating our Planet, what we throw away in on our street ends up in the ocean and then returns to poison us and our environment.

Young volunteers taking part in group discussions about the problems of discarded plastics

What we learnt from the Canal Clear ups

Terrible truths about plastics

A recurring theme throughout the Canal clear ups was how our littering actions locally actually impact upon the world globally and then come back to affect the quality of our lives locally. A big circle of environmental damage and pollution that will affect every one of us in our daily lives. The young people who took part in the workshop sessions at Tamfourhill Community Hub came up with highly creative ideas about how we can start to reduce the damage that we are causing by our constant use and dependency upon plastics.  Top of the list is the need to get rid of single use plastics like drinks cups and juice bottles and we need to stop them getting into our food chain through their pollution of animal habitats. One of the groups suggested that we ned to start using bioplastic, made from plants and therefore will break down naturally once we have finished using it, edible plastics was another suggestion so that fish can eat them safely once they end up in the seas. Governments need to get more involved and ban certain products like plastic cups and carrier bags can be taxed so they discourage people from throwing them away after using them which will also generate more cash to help tackle the climate emergency and the worldwide plastic problems. Young people felt that not enough people knew about the danger and consequences of what all this plastic was doing to the planet and so we had to raise awareness and having days like the canal clear up days was a really good way of highlighting the issues with the wider community. The biggest and most consistent message was that we must stop people dropping the litter in the first place, we must find ways of discouraging this destructive behaviour. The journey of a piece of dropped plastic like an Iron Bru bottle thrown into the canal was discussed and the process by which it ends up in the sea as it travels through our water system. Once in the sea it is then eaten by fish that we end up eating in our fish suppers, so it therefore comes back and poisons us through digesting the dangerous chemicals derived from the plastic which are now in the fish.  Here are some of the terrible facts and concerning realities of what plastic is doing to our environment:

There is an island of Plastic rubbish on our ocean which is the size of France

The amount of plastics discarded in our oceans contributes to global warming

The Plastic theme was very evident at both the canal and towpath litter picks, the most frequent litter that the groups removed were plastic bottles and discarded drinks cans, these items were by far the largest and most significant type of litter that was being collected.  I was again reminded of the scourge of thrown away plastic when I met up later in the week with the community volunteers who were taking part in the first if our monthly community litter picks. A big thank you to the group that worked in the sunshine, along Carmuirs Ave, around Elizabeth Crescent and clearing the back courts along the Glasgow Road. One of the volunteers highlighted to me the damage that leaving plastic does to our wildlife and animals and she described some horrific injuries which were  often fatal that are being inflicted upon hedgehogs due to discarded plastics, and I am therefore keen to promote the work of the Forth Hedgehog Hospital and their rescue line : 07815914912 or contact them at: queries@hedgehoghospital.org.uk, I would also point out this can also happen to your family pet, plastics are getting into every bit of our lives, the animals around us and the food we eat.  

Our plants and animals are getting poisoned by our discarded plastics and then are entering into our food chain

The Canal Clear ups will be operational monthly from May to August, there will be open community sessions , and others targeted at local groups and organisations, if you would like to book a place or find out more then please contact myself John R Hosie at: communitysafetyengager@tamfourhilltro.co.uk or give me a phone on 07391524528 , I have announced in past community safety blogs that Tamfourhill Community Hub is a national clear up Hub through Keep Scotland Beautiful, so our littering gear is always available for booking out, insurance can be provided and the rubbish that you collect will be uplifted by agreement with Falkirk Council ,you just need to contact  myself and complete a borrow form and you are away, and if you would like to be part  of a regular community litter pick, which will also involve an outdoor social activity, then the #tidycleangreen regular monthly litter picks will take place on the  first Thursday of every month at 4pm and to get involved with these then contact myself again at the same numbers. (Next Community litter pick is Thursday May 6th, Election day, location still to be confirmed so please keep out an eye on our Facebook page for further information)

The Community volunteers tackle the Glasgow Road area

Thanks to Ella Gorman at Falkirk Council Waste Services for producing and presenting the above slides on Plastics and world pollution.

community

The Easter Clear up is underway

Last Wednesday saw the first sessions in our Tidy, Clean and Green Easter tour begin with an extraordinarily successful Canal Clear up carried out by local youth groups and an incredible effort by members of the Addictions Support and Counselling Forth valley Recovery Group to clear the grass area next to Camelon Juniors FC Car park of all the discarded rubbish. The efforts of both events were noted and praised by many local people and the feedback on social media has been tremendous, so I would like to use this week’s blog to thank the partners who made this collaboration so successful and who helped demonstrate that when we all work together, we really can make a significant difference and create a community that is Tidy, Clean and Green.  The Canal Clear up has been supported by a generous grant from the Great Places Falkirk Development Fund and their contribution has enabled the participating groups to engage with the social and natural heritage of the canal and make a difference to the safety and quality of this great green space. The day’s activities were delivered and supported by Scottish Canals, TCV Scotland, Falkirk Council Waste Services, St Mungo’s High School achieve group and coordinated as part of our local community safety programme. The Easter school holiday fortnight has a youth focus on the canal whilst other community volunteers are concentrating on the streets and public spaces in Camelon and Tamfourhill. The great news is that the Canal Clear ups will be running monthly from May to August so there will be plenty of spaces and opportunities for local people and their families to get involved.   I will detail in next weeks blog and in our social media platforms how you can get involved and I would encourage you to come and make the most of the experiences, in addition to helping look after our environment, the younger participants are all receiving certificates of volunteering through the Saltire Award and other accreditations are being gained through learning new water-based safety skills.

Please enjoy these photographs from last week’s clear up along with some of the quotes from the participating young people:    

“Something I didn’t realise was just how much litter there actually was”

The youth groups excelled at the workshop session held at Tamfourhill Community Hub when they learnt about the danger of plastics to the environment and how we need to think global but act local.

There was a real social aspect to the days activities , new friendships were made through the different challenges on the canal

I learnt new skills using a paddleboard but I didn’t know that canoes are so hard to paddle

next time I would like my own canoe

I really enjoyed being with my new friend and learning how to use a canoe

And finally a view of the wonderful job the ASC Recovery Group carried out to clear all the litter from the grass area beside Camelon Juniors FC Car park: The difference is night and day

community

The Tidy, Clean and Green Campaign is on tour this Easter

As we approach the Easter holidays, and we anticipate the easing of the COVID restrictions I want to use this week’s community safety blog to highlight a programme of Community safety activities that are scheduled for the next few weeks. The Forth and Clyde Canal from Lock 16 to the Falkirk Wheel will be the focus of two full days of Canal clear up and conservation work and also happening is a series of COVID proofed community litter picks which will all take place as a part of our local Tidy, Clean and Green Campaign.

Lock 16: The centre of this Easters Tidy, Clean and Green activities.

Firstly, through funding that has been awarded by the Falkirk Great Place Project and with the support of Scottish Canals, The Conservation Voluneers and Falkirk Council Waste Services we will be launching the Canal Clear up and conservation Project. Initially this will involve local young people working on the canal over the school holidays, and this will include a water based clear up and a land-based conservation project. The young people will also take part in a workshop on the theme of keeping the community tidy, clean, and green and taking pride in Falkirk.  Every participating young person will have their volunteering rewarded with a Saltire Challenge Award and also by receiving a certificate of achievement from all the organising partner organisations. Central to this Project is to instil a sense of awareness with the young people about the importance of looking after our green spaces and through their own significant contribution to their conservation and improving the litter problems. This will be carried out in a challenging and enjoyable way. New skills will be learnt in watercraft and using paddle boards which will enable all the participants to gain their Paddle Start Award. This has really been a collaboration of a Project and it will continue to run on a monthly basis from May through to August. I will be encouraging local people of all ages and experiences to come and join us for a day’s environmental work on the canal, places will be available for each month and I will advise the local community of how to get involved and book their place by the end of April, so please keep an eye out for this on the Our Place social media and other local forums. Everybody who takes part will have an opportunity to gain certificates for volunteering and several accreditations, they will learn new skills whilst making a positive contribution to their local community.

Pupils from Carmuirs Primary School after their litter pick in December 2020

There will be three community litter picks taking place over the holidays and hopefully local people will be able to see a significant improvement to the chosen target areas. I know one of the challenges is keeping areas clean and tidy after they have been cleared, however there are plans to convert some of these bad grot spots into pop up parks and wildflower meadows and this will provide another opportunity for local activity as we move into spring and summer.  I am incredibly pleased to welcome the Addictions, Support and Counselling services Recovery community and the Cyrenians Navigator project who will be leading on two of the community litter picks which is a welcome development and I believe the beginning of a long-term community safety partnership. The third litter pick has been organised by local volunteers and I look forward to supporting them to clear a a particularly bad problem area in Camelon. I would want to point out that these litter picks all comply with COVID guidelines and will be carried out in pairs and will be fully physically distanced, and for these reasons I am unable to involve any additional people to these activities, however come May and onwards I hope that we are able to have a big community litter pick and outdoor activity at least once every calendar month.

The final action that I want to highlight is the new posters and signage that will be going up around the Camelon and Tamfourhill areas, it has a truly clear message and to remind everyone here is the competition wining drawing from Jaimee who is a Primary 7 pupil at Carmuirs Primary School, please keep an eye out for this character appearing on a rubbish bin near you.   

#tidycleangreen

community

‘Any fool can destroy trees. They cannot run away … God has cared for these trees, saved them from draught, disease, avalanches … but he cannot save them from fools’

John Muir Son of Scotland, born in Dunbar, father of the American National Parks and probably the world’s first conservationist and ecological campaigner.  The centenary of Johns death was in 2014 when the John Muir Way was opened to mark that anniversary, the walkway goes close by as it travels through Falkirk at https://johnmuirway.org/route/kilsyth-falkirk/ and then onto the next stage at https://johnmuirway.org/route/falkirk-linlithgow

John Muir Pondering on a rock

A quick resume of his childhood takes us onto the beaches of south east Scotland, Dunbar castle and playing high risk dares with his younger brother David. Fathered by a strict disciplinarian lay preacher and facing terrible brutality on a daily basis, John nevertheless developed a spiritual closeness to nature and all things wild.  He was not a great school pupil and was often getting into trouble with the class teacher, skiving off his class work to go on adventures looking for birds’ nests, animals, and rock pools and he is on record as saying, “Dunbar was my teacher”. Years later he was awarded a university degree and was hailed as a genius by many in the USA and certainly by President Roosevelt who responded to John Muirs expeditions and political campaigning by ensuring that the National Parks were established in America and have continued to thrive and develop as a core aspect of American life and culture. Muir knew that we could not take nature for granted and that as human beings we had a responsibility to look after every living thing, our human existence and the natural world were totally intertwined in an absolute whole.   

The Muirs emigrated to Wisconsin in America when John was 10 years old and its somewhat ironic that the father of the American National Parks would not have seen a national park established in his home country of Scotland until 2002 when the Loch Lomond and Trossachs National Park opened. His biggest realisation was that the trees and forests were the lungs of the world, our source of oxygen and hence the air we breathe. He was a prolific writer and campaigner for the protection of those trees and forests and he demanded their protection from man’s continuous destruction of them for profit. Remember that he was writing and campaigning about these issues over 150 years ago and it is a sad indictment on our lack of vision, action and ongoing abuse of our environment when we declare have to declare in 2021 a worldwide climate emergency.

“I have never seen an unhappy tree”

The keep Camelon and Tamfourhill Tidy, Clean & Green campaign can embrace the spirit of John Muir in two interrelated ways, firstly by looking after our local Green spaces and actively improving and restoring them and secondly through encouraging local people to volunteer in local projects whilst undertaking their own John Muir Award.  

The John Muir Trust was established in 1983 with a view to connecting, protecting, restoring and rewilding land for the common good. “Alongside communities nationwide, we connect people with wild places, campaign to protect those places, and restore and rewild land for the common good.” A key feature then is to work with communities, a theme that myself and Dan touch upon with regularity, the Trust cares for over 600,000 acres of wild land, the vast majority in Scotland and the Trust works with communities to conserve and improve this land. The Trust also supports and coordinates the John Muir Award, which is made up of 4 distinct sections, Discover, Explore, Conserve, and share your experiences about a wild place. A wild place could be a garden, a bit of waste ground, Easter Carmuirs Park, the Forth and Clyde Canal or the woodland around Antoine’s wall, it could even be the old coffin alley that links Brown Street with Glasgow Road in Carmuirs. Anywhere you decide is your wild place counts and then you can carry out your own John Muir Award. There are three levels of Award: The Discovery Award, The Explorers Award and the Conservers Award and each Award will involve you taking part in longer periods of time with more detailed involvement with each of the four sections.  I hope that we can use the John Muir Discovery Award locally and that volunteers, community groups, local schools, families, and individuals can all do a John Muir Award and get themselves a nationally recognised certificate whilst contributing to keeping Camelon and Tamfourhill Tidy, Clean & Green.

You can find out all about the Award here: https://www.johnmuirtrust.org/john-muir-award

There will be opportunities in the near future for local people to start their own John Muir Awards. Firstly, there will be ongoing canal clear ups taking place, initially for young people during the Easter school holidays but thereafter there will be monthly Canal clear ups from May through to August, and I will be looking to support any individuals or local groups that would like to get involved with these clear ups to potentially develop this involvement as part of their own John Muir Award. These Canal clear ups have been supported through funding awarded by the Greater Places Falkirk National Lottery Heritage Project and the active inputs of TCV and Scottish canals. My recent discussions with the Addictions Support Counselling Recovery community and the Cyrenians Navigator Project have agreed that we would offer opportunities for their local volunteers to participate with conservation and outdoor work and this again will provide an ideal opportunity for those volunteers to undertake their own John Muir Award. This is part of the developing Community Safety strategy and will be in align with several of that strategies key outcomes, especially around improving our local green environment, supporting the community’s capacity to address ASB and provide additional opportunities for those in recovery to gain training and qualifications through volunteering.

More information about the John Muir Trust can be found here: https://www.johnmuirtrust.org/john-muir-award

And of possible interest is my own experiences of the River Devon Valley and my journey of exploration with John Muir:

https://www.jhosiesite.wordpress.com/

‘When a man plants a tree, he plants himself. Every root is an anchor, over which he rests with grateful interest, and becomes sufficiently calm to feel the joy of living.’

community

A manifesto for safer communities: March 2021

The Scottish Community Safety Network’s ambition is that Community

Safety is valued and integrated across all relevant policy areas.

We are committed to working to achieve a fairer and more equal

Scotland.

Partnerships & working together will make our communities safer

It is abundantly clear that we have a Scottish General Election just around the corner, it will be a campaign like no other as hustings if they take place at all are likely to be virtual and public engagement is going to be extremely difficult and challenging. I really hope that this election campaign is not reduced to social media and the tabloid press as both platforms often shed more heat onto issues than any light or increased understanding.

Communities have many priorities and as I am writing up an interim community safety strategy for Camelon and Tamfourhill I am very conscious of an array of manifestos that are being published and all with the absolute and honourable intention of influencing the Political Parties in the run up to May’s election. In recent Blogs I have highlighted the Third Sector and their Manifesto for Change and the Walk Back Better from Paths for All and Ramblers Scotland both of immense local relevance. The manifesto of greatest importance however for community safety, and which will have a significant impact upon our local strategy, is the Scottish Community Safety Networks (SCSN) Manifesto for Safer Communities.  Although our local strategy and priorities will be a community led plan and will represent the voice of local people, we also have to acknowledge the wider national context that we operate within and be aware of the central driving forces of the main partners that we will be working with in the coming months.  

Let us consider the key features of the SCSN manifesto and clarify what this will mean locally for the communities of Camelon and Tamfourhill:

  • Poverty: Within Camelon and Tamfourhill we have 3 areas within the 5% poorest of the Social Index of Multiple Deprivation in Scotland, that is unacceptable, and we know that inequality impacts upon our community’s health, life opportunities and performance at school. The manifesto states:  The SCSN would like a commitment to a Universal Basic Income, thus ensuring people have more money in their pockets, Cross sector action on eradicating poverty and a continual dialogue about the harms caused by poverty.
  • Community Safety: This is a biggie for the Our Place Camelon and Tamfourhill Community Safety Strategy: The SCSN believes that communities will be safer if there is more involvement of people in communities in the planning, delivery, and development of the services that they use, they go onto stress the fundamental importance of youth work and Community Learning & Development and an emphasise upon working together through creating local partnerships which keep communities safe. This then will be the guiding principle of our local community safety strategy, it will promote community development and the local ownership of new projects and initiatives, especially with young people and the development of new local youth work opportunities.
  • Crime and Justice: There is a call for a system based on rehabilitation and more evidence-based approaches to reducing crime. Key recommendations include: a request to further raise the age of criminal responsibility, decreasing the prison population and increasing confidence in community justice, early interventions, and a topic I have raised in recent weeks: the decriminalisation of drug use. Locally this will be reflected through prioritising the development of new Recovery services and breaking down social barriers whilst reducing the stigmatisation for those who have been touched by the criminal justice system.
  • Unintentional harm and Injury: An increased focus on Home Safety, delivering more safe and affordable housing, highlighting a commitment to making roads safer and in particular 20 mph speed limits in all built up areas and a strong belief in place-based approaches in built environments. Locally we will work towards lower traffic neighbourhoods and in this respect, we are already developing work with a local Parent Council to develop- and resource a local pocket places safer school streets project.
  • Community resilience and Participation: We believe that communities that have a sense of belonging, connection and control are safer communities. The manifesto promotes a trauma informed approach, encourages a commitment to increasing community participation, including the expansion of participatory budgeting, or community choices as it is described by Falkirk Council. Our Place recently supported local people to make a submission to the Community choices programme as part of the wider; Tidy, Clean and Green campaign and in particular to further the development of local pop-up parks.
  • And Finally: In concluding the manifesto refers to a world beyond COVID where there are new opportunities in a society with increased kindness & compassion, zero tolerance of hatred and an increased focus on Human Rights and the incorporation of the UNCRC across policy and practice.

This is the wider context that our local community safety strategy will be placed within, it will be a very much local affair but one that draws strength and clarity of purpose from these manifesto aspirations, a final thought, are our would-be MSP’s listening to these aspirations for a fairer and more equal Scotland?

The full manifesto can be found at: