Ben - 9's Waterways

Friday 6 August 2010

Mugs Wanted?

I for one am not impressed by David Cameron's so-called "Big Society". The magic word seems to be "empowerment" which, roughly speaking, means the Government is going to stop doing lots of things that it has done for years and is going to let us volunteer to do them ourselves without payment.

If you think I am being cynical, take a look at what British Waterways is starting to do, as a step in this direction. They are advertising for volunteers to do what, in any normal universe, would be proper paid jobs. Waterscape's "Opportunities to Volunteer" page lists a number of such jobs.

Do you fancy driving the trip boat that goes up and down the Anderton Lift? You would be responsible for the safety of the 56 passengers, helping them on board and giving the commentary over the public announcement system. And all for nothing! You will need to be a qualified Boatmaster - BW is not offering to train you up or pay for the cost of becoming a Boatmaster.

Yes, I know that lots of people volunteer to drive steam trains on heritage railway lines, but do they do this full time? BW is only asking for one boatmaster, so presumably the successful sucker, er... applicant will be volunteering to work full time for nothing?

I know a lot of retired people who do volunary work. But there is a rota of volunteers so each one might take a turn once or twice a week, or even once or twice a month - not full time!

If you don't want the responsibility of being a Boatmaster, there are other voluntary jobs available.

You can be a café assistant at the Anderton Lift, where you would man the till, prepare and serve a range of food and drinks and ensure the cafe area and kitchen are kept clean and well presented at all times. They don't want much from you as a volunteer, do they? Anderton is also looking for a volunteer Deck Hand, Retail Assistant, Visitor Guide, Booking Office Assistant, Events Co-ordinator, Events Assistant, Grounds Maintenance person and Education person. Will there be any paid staff left at Anderton? Surely visitors pay to use the cafe, the shop and the trip boat, so why doesn't this generate enough income to pay the staff?

Not interested in Anderton? You could work in BW's Northwich office, where you would help things run smoothly and give customers a good standard of service. You would man the front desk and be the first point of contact for visitors so you'd need to have "good communication skills and a winning smile". You'd be "responsible for dealing with enquiries face-to-face and over the phone which will include boaters booking passages through locks and licensing enquiries. You will also help visitors sign in, manage the enquiries email inbox and undertake a range of administrative duties."

Is that all? And what salary are they offering for this post, which they have named "Customer Service Superstar"? Oh yes, I forgot - nowt! So what will the paid employees in the office do? Will there still be any paid employees?

You could be an "Archives Angel" and collect, preserve and make publicly available records relating to our inland waterways. You could be a "Bicentenary Events Coordinator" at Standedge Tunnel to plan and deliver a programme of vibrant events and activities to engage both locals and visitors from further afield.

You could be a "Waterways Volunteer Officer" and "work with a wide range of community groups and statutory organisations to aid delivery of the Waterway Destination Delivery Plan and help make Dewsbury's waterways a more vibrant and desirable place to be. On a day to day basis you will be responsible for developing and organising a wide range of volunteer and community engagement events and activities such as vegetation conservation work, habitat management and green space projects. You will get the opportunity to plan and deliver innovative community consultation and taster activities to encourage people visit their local canal to appreciate heritage, environment, health and well being factors." Phew! What will you do for the rest of the day?

All of the job descriptions sound like either full-time jobs or at least jobs that would occupy a large portion of each week, rather than the odd day or so a week that most volunteers like to put in. If someone has the necessary qualifications and qualities to do these jobs why would they offer their services for nothing rather than get themselves a job elsewhere? What is going to happen to BW's paid employees once (or if) these tasks get done by volunteers?

If BW really wants to save a shedload of money, perhaps they should stop paying so much money to its directors and advertise for volunteers to take on some of those positions.

I am all for volunteering, but the sort of things done by volunteers should be the extras that might otherwise get left out, rather than core roles. There are six pages of these volunteer posts on Waterscape. Okay, some of them perhaps fall into the category of "extras that might otherwise get left out" but some of the jobs listed are definitely ones that should be carried out by paid employees. Will BW attract volunteers to fill these posts? Only time will tell.

Is this the sort of thing we can look forward to under the "Big Society" where other cash-starved public services become desperate for volunteers to take over important jobs. Will we see vacancies for volunteer nurses, school dinner ladies, fire fighters and rat catchers?

Oh yes, I forget - there is also a vacancy for an "Editorial fact-checker" for the Waterscape site. Could it be that there are a few errors on the "Opportunities to Volunteer" page?

Ben
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3 comments:

  1. Well I think its simple to fix this, we adopt the Danish tax system and then all these thing can be easily paid for. So that is 55p in the pound from a threshold of 7K income, or there abouts. I'm sure you will object to that as well. There is no such thing as a free lunch, or canal system. It takes real money to run a canal as the IWA are now discovering the hard way.
    Trip boats have been crewed for free for years at places such as Marsden why not at Anderton what is the difference? We need the trippers to justify the attraction, and pay for its upkeep,
    or more to the point stopping them moth balling it as too expensive. This will mean we too can use the lift, so why should we not help out, or perhaps your suggesting we pay a realistic price to use the lift, cost of restoration £4M approx I seem to remember, Maintenance say 50K a year, that makes each trip rather expensive! rather that its in the licence as now!
    Maybe Mr Cameron should be getting rid of his mates Sueit Grabit and Run and there ridiculous addiction to it must be someone's fault and Helf and Safty overload, then volunteers can really make a difference all over the place.
    Maybe its time for the baby boomer's to pay something back into society rather than, me grab, me grab, me grab, which most of them have done for most of there lives.

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  2. Captain of Racheed is mistaken. The trip boat at Marsden has never been crewed by volunteers it has always been crewed by paid BW employees. He is probably confusing the BW trip boat with the community water taxi which is operated by member volunteers of Huddersfield canal society and operates from the same point of departure.
    It should also be noted that the water taxi is not a full time service but only runs when volunteer crew are available.

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  3. I'm with Ben on this one...

    its a typical public sector response to being told to involve 'volunteers' - the civil servants/local government types go running for the rule books and come up with grand 'training and accreditation' schemes which means before you can pick litter up at the lcal park you have to be trained in the proper use of a black bag, vetted, equipped in dayglo and finlly have any spark of life lectured out of you by the PC brigade. what most of us think of as helping out BW is a the odd day clearing C**P out of the cut or cutting back overhanging vegetation. The reality is managing volunteers is much much harder than managing your own staff and needs effort to run really well, few organisations get it right and the first thing is that the paid staff mustn't see the volunteers as a threat or nuisance....

    BW management just don't seem to have the right mindset in my opinion.

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