Sean McGinty

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SPACE Rehearsal rooms are now closed

You play here

After 5 years of trading I am really sad to write that our rehearsal rooms have closed. SPACE Blackpool CIC continues and we hope to be able to find a suitable building soon. This time with (we hope – he said with an optimism that knows few bounds) a venue and other facilities.

You can read on (although you might well be bored quite soon) or just take from this that the decision to close is totally beyond our control and it has been a terrible blow to us. We thank everyone who got involved and worked for us or who rehearsed or recorded with us and hope something we did in the last 5 years will impact on your lives in a good way.

Why do this in the first place?

SPACE was set up to give young people something positive to do. We believe offering young people the opportunity to create and collaborate in a sustainable way is just bloody obvious.

The creative arts are a great way of reaching young people and letting them come up with ideas and solutions to the problems they face and the opportunities before them. No spoon feeding. No platitudes. No agendas. No box ticking. No politics. No empire building. No faceless bureaucracy.

Just enable young people to have use of a sustainable building and allow them to create. We made it work for 5 years and we will again.

So why are we closing Cornford Road?

There are two reasons.

Firstly, our landlord wants to sell the building. So without detailing the last few months struggle we have had… in short, we haven’t got the financial and/or legal resources to fight this de facto eviction. I have had verbal threats of personal bankruptcy, threatening legal letters and it is clear we have to act now to protect SPACE Blackpool CIC as an entity. I want SPACE to continue to work to improve the lot of young people in Blackpool and any long legal fight would finish us off.

Secondly, we set SPACE up to prove that social enterprise could create sustainable opportunities for work, training and leisure for young people. We have done that for 5 years but when it all started I genuinely did not consider that my local council would be so persistently unhelpful.

I (innocently) thought they would see what we “enable” with hundreds of young people every month and work with us to make more stuff happen. Instead I’ve met scores of council officers on hundreds of occasions and have only one area of the council where you could say we have connected. There are some very good people working there who are tied down by a local government culture in Blackpool which they argue prevents them connecting properly with community groups.

The lack of any real understanding of business amongst officers of the council is regrettable (as very few have done anything else other than recieve public sector budgets or bid for euro cash and spend accordingly.) But enterprise is a crucial skill to be missing at a time when innovation is badly needed. With a £4.4 million investment in a new youth facility nearly complete I will be watching closely.

Yoof stuff

I will also be making our case for running this new £4.4 million Myplace facility. It has a venue. It has lots of other spaces we could only ever have dreamed of at Cornford Road. My offer is in front of the decision makers to work with them to get a proper business plan together. The most important thing in a business plan is ideas that will work. I have had access to some of the available documents and have so much we could input. To date the response has been limited but I remain ever hopeful.

We have proved we have the ability to run sustainable youth facilities with no help at all from the council so how come not one person wants to even consider talking to me about SPACE running the new Myplace building? We have had thousands of young people coming through our doors doing creative things and we cost nothing to the council. So what is there problem here?

Our outputs can be measured but what’s the point? I think you just get more young people doing stuff and in Blackpool on the health front there is much to do.

Not about policies shocker

Remember this is not about buildings and policies. This is about changing the woeful health and wellbeing prospects for many young people in Blackpool.

When I ask questions of council officers I am looked on as a some kind of lunatic. Like… who does this person think he is to question the money we spend and the effectiveness of our services? My colleagues and friends think I am obsessed or mental to keep doing this especially as it has cost me thousands and earns me nothing. I usually say in response that I believe the climate will change soon.

My job as a journalist is to ask questions and I will continue to do that and to try to engage in a real dialogue locally and that brings me to a positive point! Woohoo!

The Social Value Bill

I genuinely have great hopes for the Social Value Bill (as I write it is in the House of Lords.) The legislation should address some concerns about how local public services are delivered. Who can access financial information about our council and when and how community assets are used too.

It also will enable a whole new batch of social enterprises to form. In a fresh climate of local government openness and engagement (even if a bit of legal prodding is needed) those new social businesses will get a better start than SPACE Blackpool CIC has had for 5 years.

We will have to take some time to sort out what buildings are available and for one final effort for Blackpool Council to engage with us and help us find a new home. They have lots of buildings if only they would supply us the council tax payers and third sector with a list.

I wish all of you a happy and successful 2012 and thanks to those of you who have supported us. You know who you are.

On a personal note it has been a pleasure meeting and working with some of the young musicians of Blackpool and The Fylde. Their enthusiasm and spirit have been a constant source of pleasure for me and my wife Aishling. Too many names to mention but certainly Patrick has been a star since he joined us and Dean has always been there for us too. I thank you. Plus Rod, Laurson, Rob (Locals and Scraps!), Karl, Conall, Callum, Charlie, James, Henry, Dougal, Tyrone. Plus the hundreds of bands, duos, dancers, singers and others that have used our place too.

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The first monthly @GuardianSocEnt podcast is here!

Theguardian

Great excite!

I wrote last time on this blog that I was making a podcast for The Guardian.

Well I did it and you can read about it if you click the link below.

Go to the Guardian website here.

I am proud to be working with The Guardian and Social Enterprise 2011 was a very friendly and professional event in a lovely oasis of a building in central London.

Thanks to the Editor David Mills and Gines for giving me the opportunity.

Join the Social Enterprise Network if you want to find out more about social enterprises.

One more word of thanks to my bosses at BBC Radio Lancashire from whom I never stop learning.

Here’s what went on The Guardian website.

Welcome to the Guardian social enterprise network podcast – a new, monthly podcast about social enterprise. Over the coming months, we’ll be speaking to social entepreneurs and those who fund them, buy from them and work with them, and exploring the issues that social enterprises face as they do good through doing business

This inaugural podcast was recorded at the Guardian Social Enterprise Summit on 8 November.

Sean McGinty, a radio journalist and social entrepreneur from Lancashire, presents and produces this podcast.

In this podcast this month

The winner of the Guardian Social Enterprise Award – Peter Cousins MBE from Brighter Future Workshop

Murtaza Jessa from haysmacintyre, one of the judges of The Guardian Social Enterprise Award 2011

The minister for civil society Nick Hurd MP on why government support for social enterprise can’t be ‘top-down’

Jonathan Jenkins from the Social Investment Business and NatWest’s Phillip Hall and their mission to invest in social enterprise

Paul Drechsler chairman and chief executive from the privately owned construction and property company Wates explains why his company is committed to working with social enterprises

Social Enterprise UK’s business director Nick Temple on why social enterprise needs a much wider stage

Our next podcast will be published in early December. If you’ve got any ideas for features, get in touch with Sean McGinty or social enterprise network editor David Mills.

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Posted in Media, Radio, Social Enterprise, The Guardian | No Comments »

The Guardian Podcast

the-guardian

Woohoo!

It turns out I’m presenting a new podcast for The Guardian this week and a very happy and proud man I am too.

It’s their Social Enterprise 2011 summit on Tuesday at The H.A.C. Armoury House in London. I’ll be there to find out where the sector is now and where it might head across a whole range of different subject areas. From funding to regulation. New markets to growth strategies.

And the winner is…

We’ll also hear from the winner (to be announced at the summit) of The Guardian Social Enterprise Award 2011. They will receive all kinds of goodies but we’ll get to that on the podcast or click here if you want to see now. You can check out the finalists too here.

Nick Hurd MP, Minister for Civil Society

Speakers and stuff

I’ll try to grab some keynote speakers <– they are there… and ask them some searching and intelligent questions. Well I’ll try.

If you have any questions you might want to ask Nick Hurd The Minister for Civil Society then please fire them my way on twitter. You can find me here – @seanamcginty

You probably do so already but if not please follow @guardiansocent too.

Where will I find this podcast?

Good question at the back there… well it will be on The Guardian Social Enterprise Network

You’ll be able to subscribe through iTunes and other places as yet unheard of probably.

Hope you can find the time to have a listen and if you’re running a social enterprise or thinking of setting one up please get in touch I am really interested in hearing from lots of new people about their experiences.

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Tags: Blog, CIC, podcast, Social Enterprise, The Guardian
Posted in Media, Radio, Social Enterprise, The Guardian | 1 Comment »

The Guardian Social Enterprise Award 2011

You play here

So I check my twitter this morning and The Guardian’s Social Enterprise people are running The Guardian Social Enterprise Award.

Nice one. It’s great to see The Guardian putting time and resources into their social enterprise content and a new award.

I run SPACE Blackpool CIC so am interested in entering but also want to see an improved understanding of what a social enterprise is across the media. So it is as they say a win/win type scenario. Or so I thought.

Oh crap!

Here are the published entry requirements:

Entrants must meet the following criteria:

- The award is open to residents of the UK aged 18 (on or before 22   August 2011) and over

- The entry must come from the founder, co-founder, managing director or   chief executive of the enterprise

- Enterprises wishing to enter should have a turnover in excess of £200K   and or will have raised £200k plus via equity or loans.  If you have   secured significant contracts this may also enable you to qualify for   entry

- Businesses entering the awards should employ between 3-500 staff

- If you’re working in collaboration with another enterprise we will accept   joint entries

The judges are looking for projects that aim to improve services for communities, and working more effectively with health and public, voluntary and private sectors.

So what’s wrong with that?

Two things in my opinion:

Firstly, the turnover threshold of £200k. Why have one? Could it not be that a social enterprise turning over £50k has a brilliant and sustainable idea that would change lives if it won a prestigious award?

Secondly, the same old presumption that bidding for contracts with the public sector is the be all and end all of what a socent does. This is just not getting it to me.

Bidding for contracts

I could write pages about this but in brief here are some of the questions I ask myself when I decide not to look at bidding for contracts locally.

Why would I want to bid for contracts to deliver services in a way I believe hasn’t worked? Having watched and tried to engage with the public sector for 5 years now I have seen the good times. I have watched money get hurled around on one off events and unsustainable, badly designed “schemes” and “projects.” Often, they just seem to work for the people employed within the public and quasi-public bodies concerned and their political, PR or empire building objectives.

Why would I give our ideas and expertise to a public body that in the past has just nicked them, spent alot of public money without even considering if they have a clue what they are doing and then unsurprisingly, delivered little? It is like they think public money is to just be spent once, on something nice. They say woohoo aren’t we clever, put a piece in the local rag then move on to another bidding opportunity for central government money.

That’s a bit negative

That sounds like I am narky about this. Well that’s because I am bloody fuming to be honest. Raging about the way this so called “social enterprise friendly” public sector is working now.

Do I need to become an expert bidder for public money to be successful? Or wouldn’t it be better if the public sector saw socents like us as being a resource that will make innovative things happen. They should give us buildings that are empty, co-bid with us to central government on sustainable business models not one offs. They should see that the young people we engage with could be the very ones that make a change in the health choices and life aspirations of many of their friends too.

Most socents doff their caps to their public sector purse holders and end up delivering the same old crap that hasn’t worked. I would like to see that change. I want socents to be emboldened by a central government that revolutionises the delivery of health and social services. To make business plans that don’t need hand outs and to try to get the public sector to engage properly not just throw out contracts for services when they find they haven’t got any money left.

Positive stuff

At the weekend SPACE Music along with Visit Blackpool put on an event in the newly tarted up St. John’s Square in Blackpool. A huge thank you to the people from Visit Blackpool. They worked with us to deliver something that we can replicate again and again relatively inexpensively. Offering opportunities for work experience, volunteering and to promote artists music in the centre of Blackpool. It improved traffic to the square and created a really nice atmosphere in a town that sometimes on a Saturday afternoon can be er… interesting. Pictures to follow soon.

We now hope we can move inside The Winter Gardens and make some sustainable events happen for young people there too.

Locally more people within the council are getting this and I sense a thawing of the old public sector mentality. As soon as the decision makers and councillors get to understand that socents do more than just deliver the services they want delivering we will have made progress.

Central government has a huge part to play though now. When we return to long waited growth in the economy and the belt tightening slackens ever so slightly… then will be the test and the time to let us social enterprises really deliver some sustainable youth and other services.

Thanks for reading.

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Posted in New music, Social Enterprise, The Guardian | No Comments »

BBC Introducing & #Uncon22

Email sent to delegates of Unconvention22 in Preston

You are welcome to get involved even if you didn’t go to #Uncon22 last Friday

Hello,

Apologies for the intrusion! It’s Sean McGinty emailing you from BBC Introducing Lancashire and SPACE Blackpool CIC.

The #Uncon22 peeps kindly let me contact you so we can try and take forward some of the ideas that came up last Friday and make some more “joined up stuff” happen here in Lancashire.

Background: It was the last session of the day and it became clear that Lancashire’s big problem is that we are all over the place geographically. That makes it harder to work together for bands, managers, venues… everyone.

The starting point for taking this forward for us is tomorrow night at 8pm at the BBC Lancashire studios in Blackburn. I’d love it if you could come and get involved too.

The organisers and some guests from Friday’s Unconvention22 will be talking to me on the radio and I hope you will join us to throw your ideas at us and get involved with the conversation.

If you want to come down to the studios to chat, to give us your new tunes or just drink BBC coffee and talk about your experiences please email me back to let me know who you are and what you do please. You need to be there before 7.45pm.

If you can’t come then you can still email me back and ask a question or make a suggestion.

You can listen online from 8pm on Thursday 23rd June 2011 just click here! Or use one of those retro radio things.

Thanks for reading this… all I am trying to do here is help start the conversation that could lead to some solutions for bands, managers, promoters, service providers and venues alike.

I hear so many talented artists and bands every week as I put together the programme but artists tell me they need more opportunities to play live, work with promoters, producers, designers, video makers etc from all over Lancashire. If creative types across Lancashire could get together more and chat we could really build something here. That is what we are trying to achieve and I hope you can support that.

So if we can help make that happen then it is a winning/tiger DNA type scenario.

Muchos grassiass,

Sean McGinty
BBC Introducing Lancashire
SPACE Blackpool CIC

–

LINKS AND STUFF
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Tags: #Uncon22, BBC Introducing, CIC, Lancashire, new music, Sean McGinty, Social Enterprise, Unconvention
Posted in New music, Radio, Social Enterprise | No Comments »

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The music business is a cruel and shallow money trench, a long plastic hallway where thieves and pimps run free, and good men die like dogs. There's also a negative side. Hunter S. Thompson

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