December 2014 e
Transcription
December 2014 e
H & F REFUGEE FORUM e-Bulletin Supporting Local Refugee Community Organisations December 2014 In This Edition • New Social Media Training Course a hit • PHL hub fails but refugee groups not affected • New Advice Forum for borough/Refugee Week Project underway • Refugee Forum Annual Meeting Company Reg. No 04570246 Charity Reg. No 1099619 Page Page Page Page 1 2 3 3 This picture shows members of RCOs and stakeholder organisations who have been attending the Social Media training courses organised by HFRF thanks to a grant from Awards 4 All. To date, four out of six monthly training workshops have been held at the computer suite in the Iranian Association offices in King Street, Hammersmith. Writing for the web, blogging and creating a Facebook page have been covered thus far. HFRF’s Facebook page can now be visited by going to our website and clicking on the Facebook icon at the top right hand corner of the homepage. If you like what you see then let us know by clicking on Like. The training is being run by Media Trust from White City. Social Media training course a hit Hammersmith and Fulham Refugee Forum, 378 Bishop Creighton House, Lillie Road, Fulham, London SW6 7PH. Tel. 020 7386 9060. Email: [email protected] website: www.hfrf.org.uk News PHL fails but refugee groups will stay at Norland House RCOs forced to leave Palingswick House three years ago have reacted with anger on learning that the company running the so-called ‘hub’ for voluntary groups at Norland House, on the Edward Woods Estate at Shepherd’s Bush, had given two refugee organisations notice to quit. PHL – formerly the management company running Palingswick House – was given £330,000 in 2011 by the then Hammersmith & Fulham Council to set itself up in business running the new ‘hub’ at Norland House. Having completely failed to make the ‘hub’ a viable business PHL gave its only tenants, the Iraqi Association and the Kurdish Association, notice to quit by this Christmas. The Refugee Forum contacted the Council immediately and Jabbar Hasan, Director of the Iraqi Association, spoke to local councillors. The result, in a matter of days, was an assurance by the Council that the two RCOs would not have to leave Norland House and that, for the time being at least, the local authority would take over managing the ‘hub’ directly. PHL will now cease to exist, having failed to ensure that the ‘hub’ became a going concern. In the three years since they took it on the only tenants still there are the Iraqi Association and the Kurdish Association. Other groups left because the premises were unsuitable and far too expensive. PHL has blamed the council for this management failure but the Refugee Forum has made it quite clear to the local authority that we do not share this view. We have called on the Council to launch an inquiry into this use of public money. Of the £330,000 given by the previously Conservative-run council to PHL only £72,000 was given to the frontline voluntary groups that occupied Palingswick House. This money was divided up among the 16 organisations who were in Palingswick at the time. It was insufficient for most of them to carry on operating and at least half have now either folded completely or are dormant. Meanwhile PHL held on to £258,000 to establish itself as the company managing the new ‘hub’. They have clearly failed in spectacular fashion. Phil Cooper, spokesman for the Refugee Forum, said: “This sorry saga has had a devastating effect on the voluntary sector in general and refugee organisations in particular. We opposed PHL’s plans all along and, having witnessed their apparent inability to make the ‘hub’ viable, we are not surprised at this outcome. We are most grateful to the Labour administration at the Council for ensuring that our member groups, the Iraqi Association and the Kurdish Association, have not become innocent victims of PHL’s failures.” And he added: “We want a full inquiry into how and why this huge sum of money was handed over to PHL rather than being used to bolster local refugee organisations in their vital, ongoing work. We want to know how the money has been used. We also want to see the ‘hub’ now managed properly in a way that can provide, at last, some badly needed affordable accommodation for the voluntary sector in the borough.” This is how the local press in 2012 covered the row over PHL and the money given to them by the previous council. The Refugee Forum also wrote to the Charity Commission asking it to intervene but, sadly, the Commission said it was unable to assist. It did, however, refute claims by PHL that the Commission had given Hammersmith and Fulham Refugee Forum, 378 Bishop Creighton House,approval Lillie Road,to Fulham, 7PH. PHL’sLondon plan SW6 to keep Tel. 020 7386 9060. the money itself. Email: [email protected] website: www.hfrf.org.uk News New Advice Forum for the Borough The Council, working with the voluntary sector, has established a new borough-wide advice forum bringing together many local organisations, including the Refugee Forum, to ensure that advice and guidance on the widest possible range of subjects, including housing, welfare benefit and immigration issues can be dealt with in a swift and effective manner. The H&F Law Centre is co-ordinating what has been called the Advice Station which is now the central point for dealing with initial requests for advice and information. The telephone number of the Advice Station is 020 7385 1322. Refugee Week Project is well underway The partnership between the Refugee Forum and Hammersmith and Fulham Volunteer Centre on a project working with local refugees and schools is gathering pace. Thanks to a grant from the Council, the project Our Stories, Our Voices - has been able to arrange a number of sessions where young people from refugee backgrounds have been working on a book made up of traditional stories from their countries of origin. The project has also visited local schools to share some of the stories with school students and a number of storytelling sessions have been arranged with local branch libraries. Project organiser at the Volunteer Centre, Peter Rodriguez, is also hoping that an e-book of the stories can be published online. The final results of the work will be showcased at the Refugee Forum’s 2015 Refugee Week celebration event. Refugee Forum AGM The Annual General Meeting of Hammersmith and Fulham Refugee Forum will be held on Thursday 18th December 2014 Rivercourt Methodist Church King Street, Hammersmith 11am to 1pm Guest Speakers include Andy Slaughter, MP for Hammersmith Councillor Sue Fennimore, Cabinet Member for Social Inclusion, Hammersmith & Fulham Council *This is an important meeting. Please make every effort to attend and bring colleagues* Hammersmith and Fulham Refugee Forum, 378 Bishop Creighton House, Lillie Road, Fulham, London SW6 7PH. Tel. 020 7386 9060. Email: [email protected] website: www.hfrf.org.uk