Monday, May 12, 2008

Workity work work work

So a few people seem to be wondering what exactly it is I do for the Church of England - other than conference organising and other stuff. The subject matter I deal with has just come up in The Sunday Telegraph and I thought I’d share it with you so you get an idea of the crazy things (or not-so-crazy things) I do -

Last updated: 12:30 AM BST 11/05/2008

Britain will lose up to a fifth of its churches in the space of a generation unless action is taken to halt the decline, according to new research.

The number of churches is forecast to fall from 48,500 now to only 39,200 in 2030.

Today church leaders warn that the crisis threatens to devastate parishes, depriving local communities of important focal points. Conservationists said Britain was in danger of losing a large slice of its built heritage.

Responding to these concerns, the Telegraph is launching a campaign to save thousands of the nation’s churches from disappearing forever.

The threat is clear:

  • Two churches are being closed down every week
  • At least £1 billion is needed to repair all listed places of worship over the next five years
  • Yet the Government spends just £25 million a year on repairs – far less than the £200 million needed
  • Churches claim that local authorities discriminate against church-based community projects, reducing income still further
  • Planned EU changes to VAT rules for repairs could see churches having to find another £10 million every year.

But the decline is not inevitable. Increases in government grants to repair churches and to back their community work, and minor changes to planning law, could head off the crisis.

The Rt Rev Stephen Lowe, Bishop for Urban Life and Faith, today backed The Sunday Telegraph’s Save our Churches campaign, saying it was scandalous that the Church of England has to devote a sixth of its annual budget to maintaining its historic buildings on behalf of the nation.

Bishop Lowe accused the Government of lacking imagination in taking advantage of church buildings.

“We don’t want to just preserve these buildings, but to open them up. They should be used seven days a week, rather than for just a few hours on a Sunday,” he said.

Around 13,000 of the country’s 14,500 listed places of worship are Church of England premises, yet the Church currently receives only around £40 million in repair grants – half government money from English Heritage, half from the Heritage Lottery Fund.

Congregations provide a further £70 million toward maintenance of their buildings, leaving a £75 million shortfall. If the gap isn’t filled soon, churches warn that large numbers of buildings will fall into disrepair.

Last year, Gordon Brown promised in the Spending Review to examine what help the Government could give to churches, which he acknowledged remained “at the heart of so many communities”.

Hugo Swire, the shadow culture secretary, yesterday lent his support to the campaign and called on ministers to work closer with churches to come up with a long-term solution.

“Churches are not only very often architecturally distinguished, but they also play a key role in rural life,” he said. “Church closures rip the heart out of the local community, but it is quite clear that they can not be expected to sustain this huge bill.”

The Campaign to Protect Rural England (CPRE) also backed the campaign. Kate Gordon, its senior planning officer, said: “Places of worship account for much of our finest heritage, yet maintaining these buildings is often prohibitively expensive.”

Leading church figures claim that local authorities discriminate against appeals from churches for money for community projects, cutting off a revenue stream which could indirectly help pay for the maintenance.

One senior member of the General Synod – the Church’s parliament – said churches faced “barriers of prejudice”.

Crispin Truman, the chief executive of the Churches Conservation Trust, said: “Churches need to be adapted so that they are relevant to their communities. It must be done sensitively, but there must be small sacrifices if we are to save our heritage for the future.

“They can be an agent for social change and a place for people to meet. It is crucial that we keep them and help prevent society from fracturing even further.”

Story from Telegraph News:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/uknews/1944745/One-in-five-churches-faces-being-lost.html
Posted by Fi McKenzie at 10:20:36 | Permalink | No Comments »

Friday, May 2, 2008

I voted for Ken

I’m in a bad mood. It’s been a long and awful week and now everything points to a new London Mayor by the name of Boris. Grrrrr . . .

There is now almost 100,000 votes between Ken and Boris and almost all my hopes are gone. I had to think a bit about my vote for this election because Boris seemed like a good guy with some actual charisma and he rides a bike, which proves some level of insanity. But that’s why I’m not so happy with him - I think he might be all spark and no actual usefulness and when it comes down to it the leftie roots in me trust Ken more than I trust Boris to deliver on the social things that this city so desperately needs.

I guess, in the end, I won’t actually leave the country because of any new Mayor, desite his political hue but today has made me rather disappointed in the British public - who are all these people that vote BNP and why do they do it?

End of rant . . .

Posted by Fi McKenzie at 23:25:37 | Permalink | Comments (3)

Thursday, May 1, 2008

Media freedom in Fiji

More about this later when I get home but I’m outraged at the continuing insanity in Fiji. The latest being the shutdown of freedom of speech.

“Over the past year some media reporting have left much to be desired and some reports have been careless, irresponsible and some in fact have been inciteful and destabilizing, posing a threat to national security and stability,” Bainimarama said.

They were intent on “sowing discontent and discord in name of media freedom”. He demanded that media abide by a code of ethics and stop their “confrontational and negative” reporting.

The website of the top circulation daily, The Fiji Times, reports police and immigration officials have taken their publisher, Australian citizen Evan Hannah, from his home in the Suva suburb of Tamavua.

This is our backyard and it’s falling apart. I’ll explain more later and discuss some of the other problems but this just makes me outraged that the whole thing is continuing.

Posted by Fi McKenzie at 11:11:34 | Permalink | No Comments »