Another important thing…we need to know how power works, how politics works. You can’t just order democracy online and get it delivered the next day!
Jane Jones
The place is packed. The hall is fairly humming with that unmistakeable sound of people getting properly engaged. All ages. Busy tackling the big issues of local life. So why are we worried about who is not here?
Is that just local perversity? There’s lots on in Leith any day of the week. On a sunny Saturday morning folk have plenty other things to do. Even so, there are more than one hundred people signing into Norton Park Conference Centre just off Easter Road. And that with a match at Hibs Stadium next door this afternoon.
In truth, with ten tables pretty much fully occupied, there’s little room for more. Still, as flip charts show, each workshop feels gaps in the groups represented around their table. Whose voice is not being heard, where are opportunities to meet, how to fill the gaps?
And that is exactly what Leith Conference is after. Reaching out and connecting are driving purposes of this weekend. A genuine community-led ‘place-plan’ needs genuine community engagement. And no-one could accuse the organisers – LeithCreative and Leith Trust – of being unambitious. The overall aim is to lay foundations for “a new community generated Local Place Plan, shaped by people of Leith.”
For the plan to be the best, and most relevant it can be, we need input from everyone across the area.
LeithCreative
Where local meets global
That was just over a month ago (26/27 October 2019). It feels much longer. Now – I’m writing this after the general election – I briefly wonder if it’s even more perverse to focus on local issues when national and global events loom so large?
Yet the pressing issues in the conference – housing, health and well being, transport, green space, public space, environment, social care, community cohesion, sustainable employment – are exactly where local action meets global thinking. These are universal needs. The election campaign – and its outcome – has reinforced divisions within and between all parts of the creaking United Kingdom. But Leith Conference was a powerful reminder that – regardless of tribal politics – every day, people are engaged in vital work to improve quality of life in their own communities. Against the odds, they achieve small miracles. Just getting on with it. Because it needs to be done.
The point is made often by Guardian columnist John Harris. On his travels through Britain he found hope in unlikely places where grassroots activists confound negative stereotypes. And again, by Leith author Jemma Neville whose book, Constitution Street, Finding Hope in an Age of Anxiety, asserts the human commonality in her neighbours.
People make places, for better and worse. Take a closer look at that cliché and stereotypes crumble. At each table there’s a mix of ages with workshops co-facilitated by young people from Citadel Youth Club and Leith Academy [see main image, above, with film-maker Ray Bird of Rare Bird Media].
At the end of the weekend the greatest number of votes went to calls for integrated planning, intergenerational activities and a shift in the balance of power. [LeithCreative has published an impressively detailed full conference report: click HERE]
- We don’t just need housing. We need facilities, services, schools, community centres, green space, public spaces. We need a vision and a masterplan with colour and vibrancy, focused on our needs (workshop: Access to buildings and space )
- Intergenerational activities to bring young and old together (workshop: Keeping Well)
- Change of power relationships between Community & Planners (workshop: Development, housing and planning)
How to make that happen? Sharing knowledge is an essential part of successful community activism. Speakers gave insight into secrets of getting community voices heard in high places. Jemma Neville, on local community, Jane Jones, from Fountainbridge Canalside Initiative on campaigning for green space and affordable homes; Lesley Riddoch, of a Thousand Huts, Eigg Community Buyout, and The Power of Local, and Linda Somerville of Save Leith Walk now campaigning for community right to buy.
What happens next?
There’s no quick fix, as Jane Jones reminded the audience on that sunny October day. No instant gratification for community campaigners in a consumer society. “We need to know how power works, how politics works,” she says, “You can’t just order democracy online and get it delivered next day!”
LeithCreative has begun the crucial follow up, writing to everyone who took part with an invitation to join the residents’ steering group. A meeting with Scottish Community Development Centre will explore how to build on the buzz of ideas captured on those flip charts. A conversation with Forth Ports to pick up CEO Charles Hammond’s politically adept promise to kickstart a community support fund: Sounds good, what does it mean?
There is much to celebrate in Leith, as Duncan Bremner of LeithCreative and Faith Liddell of Leith Trust, said in their opening remarks. So much, in fact, it’s often hard to keep up with events and activities of an extraordinary diversity of small businesses, voluntary groups, charities and publicly funded organisations at work across a widespread area.
Leith is not just one place. Every street and open space reflects an astonishing diversity of cultural heritage. Place-based community empowerment allows for differences while developing shared understanding, and common purpose.
Faith Liddell
How to create a critical mass? There has never been a better, or more urgent, time for our communities to work together. ‘Community empowerment’ is now enshrined in Scottish legislation as Faith pointed out. Public bodies are legally bound to engage with local communities and the Scottish Government is encouraging ‘community-led, place-based planning’. But no-one at Norton Park was under the illusion that this is a simple process. Essential relationships – between people, planners, policy-makers, politicians and developers – take time to build and meticulous attention to detail to produce constructive results.
And don’t forget having fun. Eating together was another theme running throughout the event. Not least at lunchtime when a different rhythmic sound entered the room. On Saturday, Brendan Lamont of Leith Depot served platefuls of delicious chickpea curry and macaroni cheese to hungry participants. Next day it was the turn of World Kitchen in Leith with a multicultural fusion. The flavour of Leith.
Disclosure: I was at the conference representing Leith Open Space and with World Kitchen in Leith (more about the power of food in future posts). As a result of the Community Manifesto – produced after the Side by Side conference two years earlier – I was also privileged to be a member of the steering group who spent many months planning the event.
This is a slightly adapted version of the post first published on Leith Open Space
How to join in? Contact info@leithcreative.org
Further reading:
Leith Creative: Leith Creative full conference report
Audit Scotland: Principles for community empowerment
“There are risks in implementing new approaches, but there are
Audit Scotland
also risks associated with public bodies not working effectively
with communities and citizens not feeling empowered. “
Leith Open Space: Community Manifesto
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